
Hat Metaphors and Similes
Table of Contents
ToggleI collect these. Additions to this record are welcome. Also, observe that in some cases I do not know the origin of a individual expression. If you have expertise or theories of origin for something down below, I might also like to listen to from you. I hope you enjoy these.
Talking Via Your Hat
To converse nonsense or to lie. c1885. [In an interview in The World entitled “How About White Shirts”, a reporter asked a New York streetcar conductor what he thought about efforts to get the conductors to wear white shirts like their counterparts in Chicago. “Dey’re talkin’ tru deir hats” he was quoted as replying.]
Feeding on Your Hat
There is no this sort of thing as a positive matter, but that’s where by this expression arrives from. If you explain to somebody you can take in your hat if they do one thing, make absolutely sure you’re not donning your ideal hat-just in situation. [The expression goes back at least to the reign of Charles II of Great Britain and had something to do with the amorous proclivities of ‘ol Charlie. Apparently they named a goat after him that had his same love of life which included, in the goat’s case, eating hats.]
Old Hat
Previous, boring stuff out of fashion. [This seems to come from the fact that hat fashions are constantly changing. The fact of the matter is that hat fashions had not been changing very fast at all until the turn of the 19th Century. The expression therefore is likely about 100 years old.]
Mad As A Hatter
Totally demented, ridiculous. [Hatters did, indeed, go mad. They inhaled fumes from the mercury that was part of the process of making felt hats. Not recognizing the violent twitching and derangement as symptoms of a brain disorder, people made fun of affected hat-makers, often treating them as drunkards. In the U.S., the condition was called the “Danbury shakes.” (Danbury, Connecticut, was a hat-making center.) Mercury is no longer used in the felting process: hat-making — and hat-makers — are safe.]
Hat In Hand
A demonstration of humility. For illustration, “I occur hat in hand” means that I come in deference or in weak spot. [I assume that the origins are from feudal times when serfs or any lower members of feudal society were required to take off their hats in the presence of the lord or monarch (remember the Dr. Seuss book “The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins”?). A hat is your most prideful adornment.]
Go The Hat
Practically to pass a man’s hat among members of an audience or group as a means for accumulating revenue. Also to beg or talk to for charity. [The origin is self-evident as a man’s hat turned upside down makes a fine container.]
Restricted As Dick’s Hat Band
Everything that is too tight. [The Dick in this case is Richard Cromwell, the son of England’s 17th Century “dictator”, Oliver Cromwell. Richard succeeded his dad and wanted to be king but was quickly disposed. The hatband in the phrase refers to the crown he never got to wear.]
Hat Trick
A few consecutive successes in a match or another endeavor. For illustration, getting a few wickets with three successive pitches by a bowler in a match of cricket, a few targets or details received by a participant in a activity of soccer or ice hockey, etcetera. [From cricket, from the former practice of awarding a hat to a bowler who dismissed three batsmen with three successive balls.]
Challenging Hats
In the 19th Century, adult men who wore derby hats especially Jap businessmen and later crooks, gamblers and detectives. [Derby hats, a.k.a. Bowlers or Cokes, were initially very hard as they were developed in 1850 for use by a game warden, horseback rider wanting protection.] These days, “Challenging Hats” are construction staff [for obvious reasons].
In One’s Hat, or In Hat
An expression of incredulity. [Origin unknown. Help us if you can]
Throwing A Hat In the Ring
Moving into a contest or a race e.g. a political operate for workplace. [A customer wrote us with the following: “I read in “The Language of American Politics” by William F. Buckley Jr. that the phrase “throw one’s hat in the ring” comes from a practice of 19th Century saloonkeepers putting a boxing ring in the middle of the barroom so that customers who wanted to fight each other would have a place to do so without starting a donnybrook. If a man wanted to indicate that he would fight anybody, he would throw his hat in the ring.
At one point, Theodore Roosevelt declared he was running for office with a speech that included a line that went something like, “My hat is in the ring and I am stripped to the waist”. The phrase “my hat in the ring” stuck, probably because “I am stripped to the waist” is a little gross.]
Hats Off . . .
“Hats off to the U.S. Winter Olympic Workforce” for case in point. An exclamation of approval or kudos. [Origins must be from the fact that taking one’s hat off or tipping one’s hat is a traditional demonstration of respect.]
A Feather In Your Cap
A special accomplishment. [I assume that the origins on this expression hail from the days when, in fact, a feather for one’s cap would be awarded for an accomplishment much like a medal is awarded today and pinned to one’s uniform. A feather, or a pin, add a certain prestige or luster to one’s apparel.]
Hold On To Your Hat(s)
A warning that some exhilaration or hazard is imminent. [When riding horseback or in an open-air early automobile, the exclamation “hold on to your hat” when the horse broke into a gallop or the car took-off was certainly literal.]
Bee In Your Bonnet
An indication of agitation or an plan that you are unable to enable go of and just have to specific. [A real bee in one’s bonnet certainly precipitates expression.]
Wearing Numerous Hats
This of training course is a metaphor for getting numerous different obligations or work opportunities. [Historically, hats have often been an integral, even necessary, part of a working uniform. A miner, welder, construction worker, undertaker, white-collar worker or banker before the 1960s, chef, farmer, etc. all wear, or wore, a particular hat. Wearing “many hats” or “many different hats” simply means that one has different duties or jobs.]
All Hat and No Cattle
All present and no material. For illustration, in October 2003, Senator Robert Byrd declared that the Bush administration’s declarations that it required the United Nations as a partner in transforming Iraq were “All Hat and No Cattle”. [This Texas expression refers to men who dress the part of powerful cattlemen, but don’t have the herds back home.]
To Dangle Your Hat (or not)
To commit to something (or not), or stake your standing on one thing (or not), like an strategy or policy. For illustration “I wouldn’t cling my hat on George Steinbrenner’s decision to hearth his supervisor.” [Origin unknown. Can anyone help with this one?]
At the Fall of a Hat
Fast. [Dropping a hat, can be a way in which a race can start (instead of a starting gun for example). Also, a hat is an apparel item that can easily become dislodged from its wearer. Anyone who wears hats regularly has experienced the quickness by which a hat can fly off your head.]
To Idea Your Hat or A Idea of the Hat
An endorsement of respect, acceptance, appreciation, or the like. Example: “A suggestion of the hat to American troops for the seize of Saddam Hussein.” [This is simply verbalizing an example of hat etiquette. Men would (and some still do) tip their hat to convey the same message.]
My Hat In its place of Myself
This is an expression from Ecuador, home of the “Panama” hat. It suggests what is says it is preferable to give up your hat than your existence. [The Guayas River runs through Guayaquil, Ecuador’s largest city on the Pacific coast. People from the city were known to hunt alligators for their hides in the river by swimming stark naked wearing Panama hats on their heads and long knives between their teeth. When the reptiles open their jaws and go for the swimmer, he dives leaving his hat floating on the surface for the alligator to chew on while he plunges the knife into the animal’s vitals. From THE PANAMA HAT TRAIL by Tom Miller.]
Terrible Hat
I consider this is a French expression for a negative person. [Ludwig Bemelmans’ MADELINE series of children’s books, set in France, includes one MADELINE AND THE BAD HAT. In this story Madeline, our heroine, refers to a little boy neighbor as a “bad hat”. She clearly means this as a metaphor for a bad person and because I do not know the expression in English, I assume this is a common French reference. If anyone out there knows more about this, please drop us an email.]
Hat by Hat
Phase by move. [Nevada Barr’s book SEEKING ENLIGHTENMENT: Hat by Hat means just that. Has anyone heard this expression otherwise? If yes, please email us.]
Preserving Some thing Below One’s Hat
Holding a mystery. [People kept important papers and small treasures under their hats. One’s hat was often the first thing put on in the morning and the last thing taken off at night, so literally keeping things under one’s hat was safe keeping. A famous practitioner of this was Abraham Lincoln. The very utilitarian cowboy hat was also commonly used for storage.]
Here’s Your Hat, But What’s Your Hurry
When a person has taken up adequate of your time and you want him/her to depart. [Origin unknown.]
Carry His Business in His Hat
Working a small business on a shoestring. [Important papers and the like were often carried in one’s hat.]
Sets Her Cap
A youthful girl “sets her cap” for a youthful gentleman who she hopes to fascination in marrying her. [Long ago, maidens wore caps indoors because homes were poorly heated. A girl set her most becoming hat on her head when an eligible fellow came to call.]
Imagining Cap
To set on your “pondering cap” is to give some difficulty very careful considered. [Teachers and philosophers in the Middle Ages often wore distinctive caps that set them apart from those who had less learning. Caps became regarded as a symbol of education. People put them on (literally or figuratively) to solve their own problems.]
Black Hat . . .
Black hat tactics, black hat intentions, etc. refer to nefarious steps or models. [Black hats in Western lore and literature were the bad guys.]
White Hat . . .
While I do not see or hear this expression as considerably as “Black Hat”, it simply is the reverse of the higher than. [Good guys wore/wear white hats.]
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