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A Feather in One’s Cap.
For a deed or job well done you may have heard your mom, a mentor, or a “report to” of yours applaud your work. Perhaps you have been told to “put a feather in your cap.” High praise indeed that feather is. It’s a make-believe symbol of honor and achievement. Or, way back when people did add a feather to one’s head wear.
But what is the origin of such a phrase? Well, as it is with many old school or old world expressions, that is a subject of some debate.
Way back in 1599 an English writer and traveler Richard Hansard noted that Hungarians should only wear a feather in their cap if they had killed a Turk. The more feathers in your hat the more dead Turks.
The Native American tradition of adding a feather to the head-dress of any warrior for his bravery is well-known and well documented.
However, if you though as an American child it was a cool thing to recite/sing Yankee Doodle it may not have been after all.
Yankee Doodle went to town
A-riding on a pony,
Stuck a feather in his cap
And called it macaroni’.
It turns out that the word Yankee was used by the Brits to describe the naive or inexperienced. Doodle was a “polite” way of inferring dumb or simpleton. Simpletons were also called noodles. Macaroni was slang for a dandy or fop. A dandy or fop was how someone who paid far more attention to their appearance than to their substance was known. That is, just by putting a feather in your cap doesn’t yet make you accomplished at the task at hand.
In short London mocked the revolutionary militia from day one of the uprising. I guess the Ugly Americans got the last laugh.
As the late Paul Harvey would bellow, “and now you know the rest of the story.”
Comment section
Engage. Enrage. Enjoy.
Well then, put a feather in DiFi’s cap for killing Brett Cavanaugh’s SCOTUS confirmation.
What a KRAFTy write up on some history.
Now, will the Saints figure out the game, or continue to doodle?
Each of sixteen games are a final exam. The incomplete Saints grade at this point is a C-
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