Browse phrases beginning with: [A][B][C][D][E][F][G][H][I][J][K][L][M][N][O][P][Q][R][S][T][U,V][W][X,Y,Z] Jam tomorrowMeaning Some pleasant event in the future, which is never likely to materialize. Origin
The phrase caught on quickly and jam tomorrow became a synonym for a 'pie in the sky' promise of good things in the future with a few years of the book's publication. Carroll (Charles Dodgson) would have been aware of the earlier 19th century usage of the word jam - as defined in John C. Hotten's A dictionary of modern slang, cant, and vulgar words, 1859:
The popularity of the Alice books lead to the wider use of jam and other phrases were coined in the early 20th century. Anything cushy or rewarding might have been described as 'with jam on it'. For example, this item from Fraser and Gibbons' Soldier and sailor words and phrases, 1925:
Easy money was called 'money for jam'. For example, The Athenaeum, 1919 - "The great use of jam in the Army ... originated a number of phrases, such as 'money for jam' (money for nothing)." Socialists often used to ridicule the capitalist system as offering the empty promise of 'Jam tomorrow'. A quotation attributed to the labour politician Tony Benn in 1969 was "Some of the jam we thought was for tomorrow, we've already eaten." Other phrases first cited in Fraser and Gibbons: |