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When Ebenezer Scrooge said, “Christmas, bah humbug,” what did he mean?
When Charles Dickens first had Ebenezer Scrooge utter the words, “Christmas, bah humbug,” six days before the holiday in 1843, what did the English author have in mind? Was Scrooge comparing the holiday to an insect? No. But it was nothing good either. The word humbug first made its way into the English language as slang about 100 years before Dickens wrote “A Christmas Carol,” according to the Miriam Webster online dictionary and my college version of Webster’s New World Dictionary. Neither dictionary nor an online search shed much light into the meaning of the word in the 1750’s other than it was used by college students. By the time Dickens penned the utterance into the vocabulary for use by a man whose name has become synonymous with …
Francesca
3:04 pm on Wednesday, February 13, 2013
From a candy to an ornament form, that is the humbug meaning I use: http://www.causehumbug.com/2011/so-what-is-a-humbug/   more ›