Re: 'Don't try to teach...
Posted by ESC on March 03, 2000 In Reply to: 'Dont try to teach your grandma
to suck eggs!' posted by Rai on March 03, 2000
: What's the ORIGIN of
: 'Dont try to teach your grandma to suck eggs!'
: Where did that phrase come from.
: thanks
DON'T TRY TO TEACH YOUR GRANDMA TO SUCK EGGS - I don't think anyone
knows exactly how this phrase got started. On a farm, an egg-sucking
dog (a dog that steals eggs and eats them) is bad. And I think that
during one discussion of the phrase, it was said that maybe grandma
didn't have teeth so she sucked soft boiled eggs. Anyway, here's
what Charles Earle Funk says in "Hog on Ice" (Harper & Row, New
York, 1948). "To teach one's grandmother to suck eggs - To offer
needless assistance; to waste one's efforts upon futile matters;
especially, to offer advice to an expert. This particular expression
is well over two hundred years old; it is just a variation of an
older theme that was absurd enough to appeal to the popular fancy.
One of the earliest of these is given in Udall's translation of
'Apophthegmes (1542) from the works of Erasmus. It reads: 'A swyne
to teach Minerua, was a prouerbe, for which we sai: Englyshe to
teach our dame to spyne.'" That last bit was about an expression,
don't try to teach a dame to spin.
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