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Re: Mended can of wormsPosted by R. Berg on December 03, 2006 In Reply to: Re: Don't open up a can of worms posted by Bob on December 03, 2006 : : : : : : : : : : don't open up a can of worms : : : : : : : : : If anyone has a better example, jump in. : : : : : : : : : Don't mention a certain subject. It could lead to a conversation topic that is going to be unpleasant. "He asked about her ex-husband. That opened a can of worms." Or it could refer to a course of action. "We decided to remodel the kitchen. That opened up a can of worms and we wound up remodeling the whole house." : : : : : : : : : From the archives: http://www.phrases.org.uk/bulletin_board/5/messages/250.html : : : : : : : : A visual aide at: http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&q=can+of+worms : : : : : : : : : It is about the same meaning as "opening Pandora's box" (See http://www.phrases.org.uk/bulletin_board/6/messages/167.html ) : : : : : : My Scottish Grandmother was fond of describing ugly people as "He's got a face like a can of worms". Pamela : : : : : Also regarding roadways: "Spaghetti Junction." : : : : The Spaghetti Bowl: Where interstate highways 90 and 294 meet in downtown Chicago. : : : I think it means rather more than simply "a tangled tale of complications that tend to wriggle when you look at them". This phrase refers to Zymurgy's First Law of Evolving Systems Dynamics: "Once you open a can of worms, the only way to recan them is to use a bigger can." In other words, if something is a "can of worms", once you interfere with it you can't just put it back again the way it was; you will have to deal with it, and it won't be easy. The phrase has something of the warning quality of "Let sleeping dogs lie" or "If it ain't broke, don't mend it". (VSD) : : Is it time for the big guns? Okay, here's the take of the OED. : : "c. In colloq. phr. (to open) a can of worms, (to address) a complex and largely unexamined problem or state of affairs the investigation of which is likely to cause much trouble or scandal. : : I note that the first citation
is from an English source, The Times. Another quote from The TImes qualifies the expression as 'the old American phrase.' I take this as validation of my feeling that this is an Americanism, Pamela's gr
andmother notwithstanding. : Well, occasionally we Yanks mend fences, at least in metaphor, but we don't mend socks these days. We throw them away willy-nilly, or, more often, lose them one at a time in that black hole near the washing machine. Yank frugality survives among people who never accepted the throwaway society. I've been known to mend socks. Yesterday I mended a blanket. ~rb
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