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Close, but no cigar

Posted by Bruce Kahl on October 24, 2003

In Reply to: Close, but no cigar posted by GPP on October 24, 2003

: : : Hi! My mom thinks this comes from the old railroad days. Is she right? Can you please tell me the meaning and origin? Thank you. Sax

: : I think mom is right. I've usually heard it as "asleep at the switches." It describes someone who invites disaster by failing to pay attention on the job. An engineer who fell asleep instead of tending to the switches (controls) in the cab of a train would cause a wreck.

: From MW Online:
: "switch: 4 a : a device made usually of two movable rails and necessary connections and designed to turn a locomotive or train from one track to another."

: It's the switchman ("one who attends a switch (as in a railroad yard)") who's asleep.

: I've never heard 'switches' plural for this.

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