Our question this week was:Dr. Jon – have you ever heard the term "as sick as a dog"? Where did that come from?
Daniel B. – Boston.AnswerYou wrote asking if I had ever heard of the term "as sick as a dog"? I certainly have and hear it used to express an extreme degree of illness. But I really didn't know the origin of the term so looked it up and found this:
According to worldwildwords.com,
"There are several expressions of the form "sick as a ...", that date from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Sick as a dog is actually the oldest of them, recorded from 1705; it is probably no more than an attempt to give force to a strongly worded statement of physical unhappiness. It was attached to a dog, I would guess, because dogs often seem to have been linked to things considered unpleasant or undesirable; down the years they have had an incredibly bad press, linguistically speaking (think of dog tired, dog in the manger, dog's breakfast, go to the dogs, dog Latin - big dictionaries have long entries about all the ways that dog has been used in a negative sense)."Interesting stuff!
Until next time,
Dr. Jon
P.S. An article you might find interesting is one on old Wives Tales of things regarding dogs. I thought this was very interesting. Go to
Truth or Lie - Old Wives Tales About Dogs: Common Dog Myths.
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