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What is the origin of the phrase "in a pickle"?

Question #43862. Asked by woody156.
Last updated Jun 21 2021.

Senior Moments
Answer has 4 votes
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Senior Moments

Answer has 4 votes.

Currently voted the best answer.
The Middle English word Pikel meant "a spicy sauce or gravy served with meat or fowl" as early as 1400. The middle Dutch word pekel referred to a solution, such as spiced brine, for preserving and flavoring food. After it came to the English language, the connotations of the word expanded to include brining for preservation, and to the ingredients that had been treated or transformed in the brine. The Dutch phrase in de pekel zitten, "sit in the pickle," probably gave rise to the figurative meaning of being "in a pickle" as being in a difficult or problematic situation. Modern slang adopted "pickled" as a synonym for drunk.

link http://www.nyfoodmuseum.org/_pkwhat.htm



Response last updated by gtho4 on Sep 10 2016.
Jan 30 2004, 11:40 AM
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Answer has 4 votes
BRY2K star
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Answer has 4 votes.
Meaning: In a quandary or some other difficult position.

Origin: This alludes to the pickling liquid made from brines and vinegar which is used to preserve food, and presumably to the imagined difficult of being stuck in such. The phrase was known in Dutch by 1561 - ' in de pekel zitten' meaning 'to be in a pickle'. There are a few references to ill pickles and this pickle etc. in print in the late 16th century, but Shakespeare appears to be the first to use in a pickle, in The Tempest.

link https://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/in-a-pickle.html


Response last updated by gtho4 on Jun 21 2021.
Jun 23 2008, 4:52 AM
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