10.355, Disc: "Cutting the mustard"

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LINGUIST List:  Vol-10-355. Fri Mar 5 1999. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 10.355, Disc: "Cutting the mustard"

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1)
Date:  Fri, 05 Mar 1999 09:49:24 -0500
From:  MARC PICARD <picard at vax2.concordia.ca>
Subject:  Re: 10.342, Disc: "Cutting the mustard"

-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------

Date:  Fri, 05 Mar 1999 09:49:24 -0500
From:  MARC PICARD <picard at vax2.concordia.ca>
Subject:  Re: 10.342, Disc: "Cutting the mustard"

Ed Plaisance wrote:

> I have always understood the origin of the phrase to be "cut the muster"
> from the military context, as in "pass muster". Popular usage and
> etymology and has rendered it as "cut the mustard". The 1976 Webster's
> NID in the office here has both. The Collegiate Ninth Edition (1983) has
> only the latter. I guess that the term "muster" has fallen out of usage
> since colonial days, and people assume the term is related to actually
> harvesting the mustard plant.

The phrase *cut the muster* has never existed. The modern expression
*can't cut the mustard* derives from *to be the mustard* in which
*mustard* meant 'genuine article' or 'main attraction'. Further
details can be found in Robert Hendrickson's THE FACTS ON FILE
ENCYCLOPEDIA OR WORD AND PHRASE ORIGINS.

Marc Picard

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