When do we paint the town red? | | Going on a big night out is sometimes described as "painting the town red," but the origins of this phase might have been more literal. When is it appropriate to use this expression? | | | Bennett Kleinman |
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| | | | U nless you're a professional painter who was hired to create a giant mural of Elmo (let me know how to get that job!), the expression "paint the town red" is figurative. According to the Oxford English Dictionary (OED), the phrase means "to enjoy oneself flamboyantly" or "to go on a boisterous or exuberant spree." But why do we use the verb "paint" for this? And for that matter, why red instead of blue, neon green, or a glittery silver?
Legend has it that "paint the town red" was inspired by an 1837 event that took place in the English town of Melton Mowbray. The story goes that the Marquis of Waterford — who was a noted hooligan — got a little too rowdy with his friends and splattered red paint all over several buildings throughout the town. While it certainly seems like a plausible tale, the etymological origin for the phrase is difficult to confirm.
While it certainly seems like a plausible tale, it's difficult to confirm as the etymological origin for the phrase. "Paint the town red" didn't appear in print until nearly five decades later — the March 10, 1882, issue of Stanford, Kentucky's Semi-Weekly Interior Journal includes the sentence, "He gets on a high old drunk with a doubtful man, and they paint the town red together," in an article about bribing elected officials. In 1883, The New York Times used the phrase in a political context: "Mr. James Hennessy offered a resolution that the entire body proceed forthwith to Newark and get drunk… to 'paint the town red.'" Many of the early uses appear to be political in nature and to refer specifically to drunkenness.
Over time, the phrase came to be less inherently associated with politics and booze. Now "painting the town red" is used to describe any form of unbridled revelry, whether real paint is involved or not. |
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Emoji Decoded | | | | Feather | | Meaning: Depicts a single feather, often used to represent writing or lightness themes.
Evolution: This emoji quickly found use beyond its literal representation of a bird feather to refer to poetry, creative writing, and gentle or delicate things.
Usage: [Threads post:] Working on my first novel 🪶 Words flowing today ✨ |
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| | Feather | | Meaning: Depicts a single feather, often used to represent writing or lightness themes.
Evolution: This emoji quickly found use beyond its literal representation of a bird feather to refer to poetry, creative writing, and gentle or delicate things.
Usage: [Threads post:] Working on my first novel 🪶 Words flowing today ✨ |
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Have you read? | | | | The Phone Booth at the Edge of the World | | By Laura Imai Messina | | The "wind phone" at Otsuchi, Japan, is a phone booth with a disconnected rotary phone, built by a garden designer as a memorial. After the 2011 Tōhoku tsunami devastated the area, it was opened to the public so they could "talk" to their lost loved ones. This real-life setting gives us a quiet novel with poignant and realistic portrayals of grief and the process of healing. | | | | Jennifer A. Freeman, Word Smarts Senior Editor | | | | We independently evaluate all recommended products and services. If you click on links we provide, we may receive compensation. |
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| | The Phone Booth at the Edge of the World | | By Laura Imai Messina | | The "wind phone" at Otsuchi, Japan, is a phone booth with a disconnected rotary phone, built by a garden designer as a memorial. After the 2011 Tōhoku tsunami devastated the area, it was opened to the public so they could "talk" to their lost loved ones. This real-life setting gives us a quiet novel with poignant and realistic portrayals of grief and the process of healing. | | | | Jennifer A. Freeman, Word Smarts Senior Editor | | | | We independently evaluate all recommended products and services. If you click on links we provide, we may receive compensation. |
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You might also like | | | | | | What Is a "Schwa"? | | The schwa is a vowel sound depicted in pronunciation guides as an upside-down "e." If you can say "uhhhhh," you can say a schwa. |
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