three-dog night-with antedating(1932)

sclements at NEO.RR.COM sclements at NEO.RR.COM
Fri Jul 25 12:49:13 UTC 2014


4 April 1932 _Aberdeen(SD) Evening News_ 1/1 

DOG DAYS" is discounted on the frontier country of Australia.  They have their "three-dog night" over there.  It's the common expression used in referring to a night in winter so cold that the hearty frontiersman sleeping out-of-doors has to take three dogs with him for warmth.  One dog is used for his pillow, one for his middle and the third at his feet.

Found using the paid version of GenealogyBank.

Sam Clements

---- Jonathan Lighter <wuxxmupp2000 at GMAIL.COM> wrote: 
> A journalist has prompted me to look into this phrase.
> 
> So everybody knows it comes from Aboriginal Australians sleeping with Fido
> to keep warm in the desert.
> 
> Everybody, that is, but OED and the Web posters who think it refers to
> Eskimos instead.  Eskimos have more dogs and it's colder, right? So why
> wouldn't they think that?
> 
> What nobody knows is that "three-dog night" first appeared in English in
> 1957. My lingua-spidey sense tells me that it not a translation from any
> Aboriginal language, but a phrase that popped into the head of the
> researcher being interviewed or writing a press release.
> 
> Read the North American Newspaper Alliance dispatch at NewspaperArchive
> (Steubenville Herald Star, July 23, 1957).
> 
> The relevant passage: "A chilly night is known as a 'three-dog night.' A
> 'five-dog night' is really cold."
> 
> This fun fact was often reprinted as a newspaper filler for the next ten or
> eleven years.
> 
> The band first performed in May, 1968.
> 
> JL
> 
> 
> -- 
> "If the truth is half as bad as I think it is, you can't handle the truth."
> 
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org

------------------------------------------------------------
The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org



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