|
|
Re: Indian GiverPosted by Bruce Kahl on December 08, 1999 In Reply to: Indian Giver posted by Paul Michael on December 08, 1999 : I'm trying to research the origin of the phrase Indian Giver. The phrase dates back to the early 19th century and originally meant someone who gives a gift in the expectation of receiving something of greater value in return, which was indeed a custom among Indians that must have struck early European settlers as rather odd. Later on, the phrase came to mean a "false gift," as the adjective "Indian" itself took on the pejorative meaning of "false" or "mock," a sense also found in "Indian Summer" and "Indian corn."
|