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Picture of shufitz
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Elsewhere CW says, "Solicit is another word for our list of 'words that have dirty meanings sometimes' . . . I usually think of soliciting meaning to turn tricks."

Why is it called a 'trick'? Enquiring minds want to know.
 
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Picture of zmježd
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Don't know, but then you could ask: "How did trick come to mean 'a tour of duty'?" And speaking of lawyers, a few entries down in Old Partridge's dictionary is trickum legis 'a quibble of law'. Quo quibble?


Ceci n'est pas un seing.
 
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Picture of Kalleh
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I don't know how one finds out those sorts of answers, Shu. "Trick" comes from the Latin word triccare, meaning to deceive. The use with prostitutes, the AHD says, is a slang use. Is there a etymologic dictionary of slang terms? I do think I've seen one at Borders. I did find a discussion of the etymology of sexual slang here, though "trick" isn't there. I also tried various online slang dictionaries, but I could find no etymology of "trick."

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