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Yup!!

Posted by Lotg on May 02, 2004

In Reply to: Circling the wagons posted by Word Camel on May 02, 2004

: : : : : : What is meant by the phrase "circling the wagons"? A senior member of the firm where I work and I have a very friendly, professional working relationship, I thought, until someone made the statement that we were just circling the wagons.

: : : : : : What does that mean!?

: : : : : ::In the settlement of the western part of the US, wagons of settlers and freight would form wagon trains to provide for mutual defense and navigation. When threatened by bandits or hostile indians, part of the defense strategy was to 'circle the wagons' so that there would be a protected perimiter that the travelers could get behind and use to fire their rifles at the attackers.
: : : : : In our now 'civilized' society, it is called circling the wagons to bring your people or team together, and agree on the story or the approach to fend off an impending or possible attack from the outside.
: : : : : See how much we've progressed in 150 years!

: : : : I always thought it had a hostile connotation and was from the practice of Indians or bandits menacingly circling pioneers' wagons they attacked them. So today, it would mean denote any posturing before a fight or before some definite course of action was taken.

: : : ::Bookworm -- you've read too many books and have not watched enough old cowboy movies. It's the settlers who formed a defensive circle with their wagons --- the bad guys went around that defensive circle -- and got shot.

: : Hi Ward, this is obviously an American term, so I won't presume any expertise on this (apart from my vast experience at watching cowdy movies of course) - but I always supposed the term meant to 'skirt around the issue and never get to the point'.

: Did I have it wrong all this time? Yup.

I'm assuming cos you said 'yup' that you're American. And I must say that 'yup' is an Americanism that I really like. Thanks gestapo dromedary.

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