Throw the book at 'em ~Riot Act?
Posted by Robert on February 26, 2003
In Reply to: Throw the book at 'em posted by masakim on February 25, 2003
I guess a milder punishment would be to "read the riot act" to, or severely scold the defendant(s).
: : : : Anyone know the origin of the idiom or phrase "Throw the book at em." I realize it means prosecute someone to the fullest extent of the law, a law enforcement term, but does anyone really know where it came from and when it first began being used?
: : : Dictionary of American Slang, 1960 ed., says:
: : : 1 To sentence a guilty person to the maximum term of imprisonment. Orig. underworld use. From the image of a judge sentencing a criminal to every penalty found in books of law. --> 2 To penalize, punish, reprimand, or criticize a person severely. Fairly common since c1950.
: : : No time of origin is given for the first meaning.
: : (I left out the "2" when first posting.)
: Throw the book at someone, To. To
charge them with a particular offence; to inflict a severe punishment on them.
The 'book' is an imaginary book of rules or of offences and their prescribed penalties.
The expression dates from the 1930s and is of American origin.
: From Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable by Adrian Room
: ----------
:
The judge throws the book at him when he finally goes to bat. (Damon Runyon, _Collier's_,
December 23, 1933)
- Throw the book at 'em ~Riot Act? Ray Jay 02/27/03
- Throw the book at 'em ~Riot Act? Ray Jay 02/27/03