kick the bucket
R.D. Floydwrote:
I've always heard that when a person died they kicked the bucket. What is the origin of this expression?
Idioms are elusive things, and sometimes it's extremely hard to track down one indisputable source. Kick the bucket, a venerable slang term meaning 'to die', is so vivid an expression that we tend to think there must be an underlying story. In fact, there has been a certain amount of speculation.
One theory holds that the origins of the phrase lie in the science of animal husbandry. Slaughtered hogs, with their throats slit, were traditionally hung by their heels on a high wooden block. Since they were hoisted to the block by a rope on a pulley--rather like the way one pulls up a bucket from a well--the high block, or beam, came to be known as a bucket. Supposedly, the hogs' dying struggles as they kicked against this so-called bucket led to the birth of the idiom. Not a pretty picture! And not all scholars agree that this is the origin of the term.
The other popular theory relates the phrase to an act of suicide, in which someone stands on a bucket, puts a noose around his or her neck, kicks the bucket away, and dies by hanging. Unfortunately, this theory, in spite of its direct, highly graphic relation to the words in the idiom, is as unsupported as the swinging suicide. And kick the bucket does not normally refer to death by suicide. Indeed, the person who kicks the bucket may do so quite unwillingly.
Death is a subject surrounded by fear and taboos, and this has led to two antithetical ways of avoiding the very words "death" and "die." One device is euphemism. People talk of passing away, passing on (as to an afterlife), departing this life, or, more floridly, going to the great beyond. A doctor may say to a surviving relative, "We lost him." People perish, expire, or breathe their last. The other device is the use of irreverent, slangy, even crude terminology. The idea is to cloak the topic of death in humor. With anything from a casual look or a shrug to a sneer or an expression of shock, someone may say, "Hey, she just croaked, OK?" or, you guessed it, "...kicked the bucket."
here is what that word meaning! wink!! TongueOnFire
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