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Conference thebay::joyoflex

Title:The Joy of Lex
Notice:A Notes File even your grammar could love
Moderator:THEBAY::SYSTEM
Created:Fri Feb 28 1986
Last Modified:Mon Jun 02 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1192
Total number of notes:42769

844.0. "... will you bet your badge ..." by MODEL::CIUFFINI (God must be a Gemini...) Thu Nov 29 1990 15:51

    
    Recently, I have heard a new phrase - possibly unique to
    Dec - maybe not. The phrase is "Bet your badge" as in
    "The schedule for the mumble_fritzProject is so good that
     the Project Leader will 'bet his/her badge'".
    
    Is this of recent vintage? Is is unique to Dec?
    
    Thanks,
    jc
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844.1No thanksPOWDML::SATOWThu Nov 29 1990 18:297
>    Is this of recent vintage? Is is unique to Dec?

Could be that it's of recent vintage, and rather ominous.  Turning over your 
badge is something you do when you (are) terminate(d).  So "bet your badge" 
could be an alliterative euphemism for "bet your job".

Clay
844.2TKOV51::DIAMONDThis note is illegal tender.Fri Nov 30 1990 02:3510
    >Is this of recent vintage?
    Yes.
    
    >Is is unique to Dec?
    If it goes away soon, it will be unique to Nov. - - - - - - - ---
MODEL::CIUFFINI "God must be a Gemini..."            10 lines  29-NOV-1990 15:51
    
    >Turning over your badge is something you do when you (are) terminate(d).
    No wonder the guy installing SCSI cables was turning his badge over
    and over again.
844.3SQM::TRUMPLERHelp prevent truth decay.Fri Nov 30 1990 18:122
    The phrase probably originated in the law enforcement community.
    After all, they've had badges for some time...
844.4"You bet-um your wampum!"STRATA::RUDMANAlways the Black Knight.Mon Jul 22 1991 20:248
    Now that you've bet you badge, would
    
    "you bet your derby"?
    
    I speculate it originally had something to do with horse racing in
    Britain, but I have no real facts.  Anyone?
    
    							Don 
844.5Nah.SMURF::SMURF::BINDERSimplicitas gratia simplicitatisTue Jul 23 1991 15:585
    I'll bet my bippy that betting one's derby more likely has something to
    do with the hat of that name.  (The derby is sometimes mistakenly
    called a homburg; the latter has a creased crown.)
    
    -d
844.6bippy�MARVIN::KNOWLESDotting jots and crossing tittlesTue Jul 23 1991 17:1412
    I agree with .5 about the probability, although it's conceivable
    that the naming of the Derby hat itself has got something to do with
    horse-racing.
    
    Whether or not horse-racing has anything to do with it, I suspect that
    the phrase `I'll eat my hat' had something to do with it (`I'll bet
    my Derby' being just a particularized variation).
    
    Of course, there's the possibility that Crown Derby tableware... nah.
    
    b
    
844.7POWDML::COHEN_RTue Jul 23 1991 18:0921
    
    
    	Well, I don't have an OED nearby, however, I think that the
    	previous note is closer to the mark.
    
    	In the nineteenth century outrageous wagers were made during
    	the heat of political races.  There are numerous drawings showing
    	men pulling wagons in the streets as a result of losing one
    	of these bets.  Eating one's hat was a common gamble, but this
    	was the age of straw hats, panamas and boaters.  It would seem 
    	a logical evolutionary move to bet one's hat.
    
    	Even in our era (well, my era, at least), there used to be a 
    	cigarette commercial on	television which displayed a straw hat 
    	with a bite out of it ("Show me a cigarette with more taste and 
    	I'll eat my hat!") I can't remember the brand, but I do recall 
    	both men and women in gustatory rapture. (Much like all Tarryton 
    	smokers had black eyes and Lark people kept snipping their filters 
    	in half -- "Winston tastes good like a cigarette had oughta" -- 
    	Granny on the "Beverly Hillbillies" when R.J. Reynolds ruled the
    	waves.)
844.8Telling my age?SMURF::CALIPH::binderSimplicitas gratia simplicitatisTue Jul 23 1991 20:553
The bitten boater was one of Lucky Strike's ad campaigns, I think.

-d
844.9EtymologySHALOT::ANDERSONAs Seen on TVThu Jul 25 1991 23:433
	Both forms of derby are from Edward Stanley, 12th Earl of Derby.

		-- Cliff
844.10MARVIN::KNOWLESDotting jots and crossing tittlesFri Jul 26 1991 16:526
    And what was the 12th Earl of Derby's relation to Lord (not sure of the
    rank) Sandwich? I think we may have discovered the root of the
    expression `I'll eat my sandwich'.
    
    
    b
844.11HEART::MACHINFri Jul 26 1991 17:285

...not to mention the retort: "You can't eat your Sandwich and wear it'.

Richard.