"time out of mind"
Posted by Shae on May 27, 2003
In Reply to: "Time out of mind" posted by Beth on May 27, 2003
: Can anyone help me with an understanding and/or origin of this
phrase?
: Thanks.
TIME IMMEMORIAL, TIME OUT OF MIND: Strictly speaking, 'time immemorial' is any time before 1199, this being the date set in 1275 as the time before which no one could remember, and therefore no legal cases could deal with events before that date. 'Time out of mind,' recorded from the fifteenth century, is just the plain English version of the same thing. Since the eighteenth century at least, 'time immemorial' has been used in much the same way as the 'Mists of time' and both expressions are now often used vaguely to mean little more than 'in the past.' Julia Cresswell, Penguin Dictionary of Clichés, 2000.
I hadn't heard of this compulsory amnesia imposed in 1275 before. Does anybody know more about it?
- "Time out of mind" 1189 Lewis 06/02/03
- "Time out of mind" Henry 05/27/03
- Time out of mind, time immemorial ESC 05/27/03
- "Time out of mind" Henry 05/27/03