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WINGED WORDS, PHRASEOLOGICAL UNITS
Directory / Winged words, phraseological units / slander, slander, let something remain

Winged words, phraseologism. Meaning, history of origin, examples of use

Winged words, phraseological units

Directory / Winged words, phraseological units

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slander, slander, let something remain

Plutarch
Plutarch

Phraseologism: Slander, slander, let something remain.

Meaning: Any slander, even if refuted, always leaves a mark on a person's reputation. Moreover, the one who tries to refute slander, only by this puts himself in a false position (see also Whoever is justified, he accuses himself).

Origin: From French: Calomniez, calomniez, il en restera toujours quelque chose! From the monologue of Don Basilio in the comedy (act. 2, yavl. 7) "The Barber of Seville" (1775) by the French playwright Pierre Augustin Beaumarchais (1732-1799). Already in those days, this phrase was widely quoted as a well-known catch phrase. Thus, the English philosopher Francis Bacon (1561-1626) in his Treatise on the Dignity and Improvement of the Sciences (1623) writes (book 8, 34): One can say the same about boasting: believe me, boast boldly, there will always be something left of boasting. Therefore, sometimes this expression is quoted in Bacon's version, that is, in Latin: Audacter cahimniare, semper aliquid haeret - Slander, boldly slander, there will always be something left from slander. The idea itself has been known since antiquity. In the work of the ancient Greek historian Plutarch "How to distinguish a flatterer from a friend", a certain Media (Medius), one of the courtiers of Alexander the Great, is mentioned, who said that one can "boldly slander and bite, because the scar will remain in any case." The expression came to Russia from France, along with the comedy of Beaumarchais, and therefore was previously quoted in French. A. S. Pushkin (excerpt "Guests gathered at the dacha") gave his own translation of this expression: "Slander, even without evidence, leaves strong traces."

Random phraseology:

Glue and scissors.

Meaning:

Cutting out individual passages from a previously written text (one's own or someone else's) and gluing them together, replacing one's own original work (iron.).

Origin:

The author of the expression is the Swiss critic and poet Johann Jakob Bodmer (1698-1783). In his writings, he at least twice used this expression - "scissors and a pot of glue" (1744), characterizing the "creative method" of some writers. It was the Swiss critic that the German writer, philosopher-educator and art theorist Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729-1781) referred to, thanks to whom this expression became widely known. In his Letters on Modern Literature (letter 17, 1759), Lessing repeated Bodmer's formula in relation to the boring tragedy The Dying Cato (1732) by the German classical playwright Johann Christoph Gottsched (ironically nicknamed in Germany "literary dad" - by analogy with the Pope Roman). After that, the expression became winged. In Soviet times in Russia, among journalists who prepared editorials, there was a popularly similar ironic expression - "the Rekle method", which meant the same work technology - "cut and glue" ..

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