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The Pot calling the kettle blackThe Pot calling the kettle black : PhrasesMeaning: The notion of a criticism a person is making of another could equally well apply to themself. Example: Origin: This phrase originates in Cervantes' Don Quixote, or at least in Thomas Shelton's 1620 translation - Cervantes Saavedra's History of Don Quixote: "You are like what is said that the frying-pan said to the kettle, 'Avant, black-browes'." The first person who is recorded as using the phrase in English was William Penn, the founder of Pennsylvania, in his Some fruits of solitude, 1693: "For a Covetous Man to inveigh against Prodigality... is for the Pot to call the Kettle black." Shakespeare had previously expressed a similar notion in a line in Troilus and Cressida, 1601- "The raven chides blackness." Phrases Index |
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