shenanigan
English
editEtymology
editOf uncertain origin. Earliest known use comes from San Francisco in 1855 (and earliest known mention in 1854[1]) at the time of the California Gold Rush. These possibilities have been suggested:
- French ces manigances (“these fraudulent schemes”).
- Spanish chanada, shortening of charranada (“trick, deceit”).
- Irish sionnachuighim (“I play the fox”).[2]
- Rhine Franconian schinägeln (“to work hard”), from the peddler's argot term Schenigelei (“work”).[2]
- East Anglian dialect nannicking (“playing the fool”).
- 18th century German Scheinheilige (“sham holy men / sham holy actions”, noun plural), scheinheilig (“hypocritical”)
Pronunciation
editNoun
editshenanigan (countable and uncountable, plural shenanigans)
- (countable) A deceitful confidence trick, or mischief causing discomfort or annoyance.
- I spotted his next shenanigan – saw it coming – and so avoided being fooled.
- (uncountable, dated, rare) singular of shenanigans.
- 1855 September, “Mr. Soap’s Yachting Excursion”, in Yankee-notions, volume IV, number 9, New York, N.Y.: Published by T. W. Strong, 98 Nassau-st., →OCLC, page 280:
- One of Professor [John] Moon's most astonishing "experiments," consisted of holding a watch suspended from a short chain at arm's length, and allowing anyone in the pit to pull pistol and "blaze away" at the word "fire," whereupon the watch would most unconscionably disappear. An individual who had attended several evenings and witnessed the "experiment," suspected, in the classic language of the times, that there was something of "shenanigan" in it.
- [1877], Cha[rle]s H. Sparks, “Political History”, in History of Winneshiek County, with Biographical Sketches of Its Eminent Men, Decorah, Iowa: Jas. Alex. Leonard, →OCLC, page 31:
- There are stories still told how money was used and promised, but from the best knowledge I can acquire, I think this is not true. If sharp practice was played, and "shenanigan" was used, we, to-day, looking back upon those times, cannot say that evil has come of it.
Derived terms
editTranslations
editsingular of shenanigan — see shenanigans
References
edit- ^ “Questions and Answers”, in The Wide West[1], volume I, number 42, San Francisco, 1934 December 31:
- Abstrusus–In your answers to correspondence last week is given a definition to which I must except: An Irish word which you write 'shenanigan' is defined as being synonymous with our English word 'humbug,' thus depriving the natives of 'the Breast-pin of the Ocean' of the credit of great shrewdness in the use of the word.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Word Origin and History for shenanigan at Dictionary.com
- shenanigan on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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