Brass monkey (colloquial expression)
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Brass monkey (colloquial expression)
The Brass Monkey of Stanthorpe, Queensland - the place known for its "brass monkey weather", complete with a set of balls These earlier expressions would seem to indicate that the brass monkey took the form of a real monkey, rather than being the name for some dissimilar object, without a nose and tail, such as a tray to hold cannonballs as has been theorised. During the 19th and 20th centuries, small monkeys cast from the alloy brass were very common tourist souvenirs from China and Japan. They usually, but not always, came in a set of three representing the Three Wise Monkeys carved in wood above the Shrine of Toshogu in Nikk?, Japan. These monkeys were often cast with all three in a single piece. In other sets they were made singly. The theory of the Three Wise Monkeys as being the source of the expression is supported by Michael Quinion, advisor to The Oxford English Dictionary and author of World Wide Words.[1] Whether or not it was these brass monkeys?common objects that could be purchased in any store selling Asian goods?or some other object, possibly not closely related to actual monkeys, has been a subject of speculation, theories and association. The phrase, as it is currently used, is found in most English-speaking countries, and is sometimes abbreviated to "brass monkey weather". According to Quinion, the expressions relating to "brass monkeys" have more currency in Australia and New Zealand than elsewhere.
Early recorded uses of the expressionEarly references to "brass monkeys" in the 19th century have no references to balls at all, but instead variously say that it is cold enough to freeze the tail, nose, ears, and whiskers off a brass monkey; or hot enough to "scald the throat" or "singe the hair" of a brass monkey. All of these variations imply that an actual monkey is the subject of the metaphor.
The current reference to the monkey's balls, rather than its nose, tail or other anatomical part or characteristic such as "gall" is in line with a general trend within the 20th century towards both sexually orientated or obscene references[6] in colloquial English. Other theories on the origin of the expressionCannonballsOne theory, of sufficient popularity as to be an example of so-called folk etymology, is that a brass monkey is a brass tray used in naval ships during the Napoleonic Wars, for the storage of cannonballs, piled up in a pyramid. The theory goes that the tray, would contract in cold weather, causing the balls to fall off. [7] This theory is discredited by the US. Department of the Navy[8] and the etymologist Michael Quinion and the OED's AskOxford web sitehttp://www.askoxford.com/ for five main reasons:
Brass CannonsA similar theory states that expression refers to a cannon. Quinion notes that there was a cannon nicknamed this in the mid-seventeenth century (i.e. much too early). However, although early brass cannons known as 'monkeys' were outmoded by cast iron cannon, cast iron, when very cold, becomes brittle. So, in very cold weather the cast iron cannons could be prone to shattering when fired. Brass is not subject to the same effect, so brass guns could still be fired safely in cold weather. Thus it became a seamans ironic joke that in extreme cold weather they would have to revert to using old fashioned 'brass monkeys' (even though the Royal Navy no longer had any in use) Hence it would be 'cold enough to use brass monkeys' - nothing to do with genitals. CunardThe "brass monkey" is the nickname of the house flag of the Cunard Line, adopted in 1878, a lion rampant or on a field gules holding a globe.[9] The reference is almost certainly irreverent humour, rather than a source of the expression, of which variants predate it. PawnbrokersYet another theory is that the traditional sign outside a pawnbroker's shop, three brass spheres suspended from a gantry, was known in some parts as a "brass monkey" and the expression refers to these, very exposed, "balls". Other references to brass monkeysRadioIn the propagandist early radio show "I was a Communist for the FBI" "a brass monkey" is used as a variant of the phrase "a monkey on one's back". In the episode on Wednesday 8 April 1953, episode #51, entitled "The Brass Monkey", it referred to a convict with a "brass monkey", meaning a conviction. Pub name"The Brass Monkey" is a popular name for pubs in Australia, the United States, The Republic of Ireland, and the United Kingdom (such as the Brass Monkey in Newry, Co. Down). Motorcycle Rally"The Brass Monkey" is a motorcycle rally held each winter in the South Island of New Zealand. FictionIn Alan Dean Foster's Icerigger Trilogy, Brass Monkey is the principal Humanx settlement on the glacial planet Tran-Ky-Ky. Pop MusicIn 1987, the pioneering hiphop band the Beastie Boys released a single called "Brass Monkey" from their breakthrough album Licensed to Ill. References
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