Home
Search THIS Site
Online Tutoring
Main Index
A Word A Day
ESL Jobs
Find Your Teacher
Nursery Rhymes
Beauties of English
What is NEW?
Grammar - 1
Grammar - 2
Intermediate Level
Advanced English
f.a.q
Tips
Plain English
Vocabulary
Etymology
Synonyms
Antonyms
TOEFL
GRE
GMAT
Your English Teacher
Business Letters
Difficult Words
Social Letters
Short Stories
English Poems
English Songs
Famous Quotations
Business Dictionary
About Us
Contact Us
Grammar Tests
Exam Tips
English to Enjoy Life
Practising English
SMS English
Essays

[?] Subscribe To This Site

XML RSS
Add to Google
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to My MSN
Subscribe with Bloglines

 

The Cut of Your Jib


Previous Page

The Cut of Your Jib : Phrases



Meaning:

One's general appearance and demeanour.


Example:







Origin:

The jib of a sailing ship is a triangular sail set between the foretopmast head and the jib boom. Some ships had more than one jib sail. Each country had its own style of sail and so the nationality of a sailing ship, and a sailor's consequent opinion of it, could be determined from the jib.

The phrase became used in an idiomatic way during the 19th century. Sir Walter Scott used to it in St. Ronan's Well, 1824:

"If she disliked what the sailor calls the cut of their jib."

There may be an allusion between the triangular shape of noses and jibs in the figurative use of this phrase, but this isn't authenticated.



Phrases Index





From The Cut of Your Jib to HOME PAGE