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Fighting hard

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March 19, 2005, 05:22
Caterwauller
Fighting hard
"fighting tooth and nail"

What is the history of this phrase?


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"Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions.
~Dalai Lama
March 19, 2005, 06:06
jheem
I always assumed that the nails involved were the kind at the ends of one's fingers. Though nails of the six-penny dreadful kind are cognate.

This message has been edited. Last edited by: jheem,
March 19, 2005, 19:48
jheem
Chas Earle Funk has this to say: "... with tooth and nail became an English phrase signifying 'with all the powers at one's command.' The old Latin equivalent was toto corpore atque omnibus ungulis 'with all the body and every nail.' In France it's bec et ongles closely approaching our English phrase, but with the literal meaning 'beak and talons.'" [Heavens to Betsy! & Other Curious Sayings, p.205, 1955]
March 20, 2005, 15:06
<Asa Lovejoy>
Fighting hard? As opposed to fighting flaccid?
March 20, 2005, 15:49
Doad
The latter may prove to be rather less distracting! Wink
March 20, 2005, 19:38
Kalleh
I always thought it funny that "fighting hard" is the opposite of "hardly fighting."
March 20, 2005, 22:10
tinman
Just like "working hard" and "hardly working" are opposites.

Tinman