down to brass tacks (1867)
Jonathan Lighter
wuxxmupp2000 at YAHOO.COM
Wed Nov 15 17:44:05 UTC 2006
Ron, this was asserted during the 20th C., but there is no substantion of it that I know of.
JL
RonButters at AOL.COM wrote:
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Sender: American Dialect Society
Poster: RonButters at AOL.COM
Subject: down to brass tacks (1867)
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It was my understanding that BRASS TACKS derived from Cockney rhyming slang
(= 'facts'). If so, there must be a London usage that predates the American one
shown here.
In a message dated 11/7/06 11:38:02 AM, bgzimmer at BABEL.LING.UPENN.EDU writes:
> On 11/7/06, Benjamin Zimmer wrote:
> >
> > From the 19th C. US Newspapers database (guessing on the page number):
> >
> > 1867 _Bangor (Maine) Daily Whig & Courier_ 12 Jan. 2[?]/3 The
> > Galveston Bulletin says that Texas must "come down to brass tacks" and
> > accept the constitutional amendment, unless the people wish Congress
> > to proceed with reconstruction.
>
> Using the "browse list" feature on the database, I see I was correct
> in guessing that the page number is 2.
>
>
> --Ben Zimmer
>
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>
>
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