Several words have become part of the language in being used in phrases. Last time we looked at ‘north’ and now look at ‘bottom’.
Bottom has a couple of meanings in English today, but historically different languages have given very different meanings. For example Old English referred to botm as ‘soil, deepest part’; Old Frisian ‘soil’, Old Norse ‘ground’, Old German ‘earth’, have similar meanings. Old Irish bondreferred to ‘the sole of the shoe’; but ‘bottom’ is the meaning for Sanskrit budhanah, Avestan buna, Greek pythmen, and Latin fundus all mean ‘bottom’.
Nobody got to the bottom of the matter until 1570.
Bottom as in ‘a person’s posterior’ is not seen in English until 1794.
Bottoms up began in 1875.
Bottom dollar dates from 1857, and seen in the UK just after the First World War.
It was felt from the bottom of the heart for the first time in 1540.
Fish were described as bottom-feeders, where applicable, from 1866.
To reach the bottom of (as in to fathom, which was the earlier expression) dates from 1808.
River bottoms were unrecorded until 1752.
Rock bottom dates from 1884.
Nobody referred to this being ‘the bottom line’ until 1832.
Nothing was bottomless (such as a pit) until the early 14th century. By design nothing can actually be bottomless, but ‘very deep’ doesn’t quite cut it.
Bell-bottom trousers were first described in 1882, and enjoyed a resurgence in the 1960s thanks to the fashion choices of the era.
Black bottom was a jazz dance seen at least by 1907, and became a national craze in the USA when it appeared in a Broadway musical.
Scraping the bottom of the barrel is difficult to date as the origin really did mean getting right to the bottom as barrels were used for storing many foodstuffs. However, we do know the metaphorical use dates from the 1930s.
In baseball the phrase ‘bottom of the inning’ refers to the latter stages of the inning, and the earliest known record of that is as early as August 1730.
Smooth (or soft) as a baby’s bottom appears in the middle of the 20th century.
Bottom drawer, in use by 1866, was where young ladies would gather household items for future use as a married woman.
Bottom the house, ie to give it a thorough clean, is first seen in the early 19th century.
Trackie bottoms is a phrase which has become a part of the English language in recent years, but is unknown before about 1999.
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