toe the line = push the limits

Amy West medievalist at W-STS.COM
Wed May 16 13:12:58 UTC 2012


I searched the ADS-L archives (very quickly) and didn't see anything
about this there yet (but I may have missed something) . . . .

This is not the first time that I've noticed the use of "toe the line"
to mean something along the lines of "push the limits of":

--------------

 From a FB discussion re: Hildegard of Bingen's recent sainthood:

Wow- and she is seriously wacky so I'm a little surprised. I mean she
toed the line on heresy for sure.

---------------

Those who know about HvB know that she was very close to being (if not
outright) heretical in her mystical writings. The rhetor (and I use that
term specifically because the writing on FB is much more like speech)
above is not using "toed the line" above to mean, as MWC11 has it, " to
conform rigorously to a rule or standard." Rather, she's meaning that
HvB almost crosses the line.

I don't know if the speaker is an ESL speaker or native speaker, but I
think there's some reanalysis of the phrase going on, and I think we're
seeing this phrase take on this second meaning opposite to the first.
(Oh, heck, what is this process called?) And it may be due to the
influence of the phrase "cross the line." I think I have seen some of my
students use "toe the line" this way. Once we get editors who use it
this way, we'll start seeing it in published materials.

---Amy West

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