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Raggle-Taggle




Phrases of Reduplication



Raggle-Taggle : Rag, tag and bobtail





Meaning:

A common rabble - the hoi polloi.



Example:







Origin:

UK folk of a certain age will remember Rag, Tag and Bobtail as characters from the eponymous BBC children's television programme. On the face of it we could be forgiven for thinking that the names were made up for the show, but, like Andy Pandy - which was clearly influenced by the name namby-pamby, Rag, Tag and Bobtail derives from an earlier phrase.

A bobtail was the tail a horse which was cut short. Shakespeare makes reference to the word in King Lear, 1605. Soon after that it was used by John Fletcher, in Monsieur Thomas, 1619, as slang for a cur or contemptible rascal. A tag was a piece of torn, hanging-down cloth. Those were combined with rag to form the earlier version of the phrase - tag, rag and bobtail. This was recorded by Samuel Pepys in his Diary for 6th March 1659:

"The dining-room... was full of tag, rag, and bobtail, dancing, singing, and drinking."

The later form 'raggle-taggle' is an extension of 'rag-tag'. This was in use from the end of the 19th century, for example, in Sabine Baring-Gould's novel, Urith: a tale of Dartmoor, 1891:

"A raggle-taggle, beggarly crew."

That version of the expression is best remembered via the popular English folk song The Raggle-Taggle Gypsy. This was collected in Somerset by the founding father of the English folk song revival Cecil Sharp. With Charles Marson, Sharp published Folk Songs from Somerset, 1904:

What care I for my house and my land?
What care I for my money, O?
What care I for my new wedded lord?
I'm off with the wraggle taggle gipsies, O!








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