Context/ examples | We have been waiting for the Christchurch Conservative journal to condemn one of the latest conversions, but it has been mute as a maggot. The Star. Issue 5826, Saturday, Issue 5826, 20 March 1897, Page 4http://www.paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/...I never say a word. Sure-ly, I could hang half the parish, if I wasn't as mute as a maggot! Fraser's magazine for town and country, Volume 39, p. 656, 1849http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=UdYAAAAAYA...My uncle doesn't understand a word; embarrassed, mute as a maggot, he steps back and points to the sofa. Hoffman, E.T.A., Weird Tales, Volume 1, Fairford: Echo Library 2010, p. 24 http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=kJV9I9N828...= reprint of Weird Tales, By Ernst Theodor Amadeus Hoffmann, A New Translation from the German with a Biographical Memoir By J.T. Bealby. NY: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1885. http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=EA0PAAAAIA...She's more like a ghost than a tarrier dawg. Runs mute as a maggot, and is joost as fast as a greyhound. Baily's Magazine of Sports and Pastimes, Volume XL, 1883, p. 290 http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=3jfjlS4-x9...I had to keep mute as a maggot. Xueqin Cao, The dream of the red chamber: a Chinese novel of the early Ching period, New York, N.Y.: Pantheon Books 1958, p.Page 387 "The English translation by Florence and Isabel McHugh, is based on the German version, Der Traum der Roten Kammer, Insel Verlag, Wiesbaden, which Dr. Franz Kuhn has translated and adapted from the Chinese" http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Hl5kAAAAMA...http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/350000?loo...He asked in all the languages he knew, but she remained as mute as a maggot. However, as she was so beautiful, the King's heart was touched and he fell passionately in love with her. Grimms' fairy tales, Translated by Vladimír Vařecha, London : Cathay Books, 1984 p.70http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=NlaNtOLOjC...Weit häufiger als der Reim begegnet in solchen Vergleichen jedoch Alliteration: mad as mud, mute as a maggot, right as rain, etc. Hansen, K., 'Rhyming Slang and Reimform im Slang'. Zeitschrift für Anglistik und Amerikanistik 14 (1966), 343http://books.google.de/books?id=pt9ZAAAAMAAJ...maggot (...) See acting the maggot; gallop (one's) antelope; mute as a maggot; fool at one end . . .; when the maggot . . . maggot-boiler. (...) mute as a maggot. Excessively silent: proletarian coll.:—1923 (Manchon). Eric Partridge, Paul Beale, A dictionary of slang and unconventional English: A dictionary of slang and unconventional English: colloquialisms and catch phrases, fossilised jokes and puns, general nicknames, vulgarisms and such Americanisms as have been naturalised, London: Routledge, 8th ed. 2002 pp. 713, 770http://books.google.de/books?id=tvRp1whVFUsC...http://www.bookrags.com/tandf/mute-as-a-maggot-tf/ |
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Comment | Mir scheint, die einfache Google.uk-Suche hat sich ein Vorbild an den schüchternen LEO-Suchen genommen, die gerne mal nicht alles zeigen, was es gäbe...;-) Bei Google-Books finde ich doch einige mute maggots in freier Wildbahn, allerdings meist recht angejahrt!
CM2DD, welche Wörterbücher würdest Du denn als "reputable dictionaries" durchgehen lassen? Ältere Ausgaben von Muret-Sanders oder Langenscheidt verzeichnen as mute as a maggot jedenfalls. Interessanterweise ordnen Partridge/Beale den Ausdruck dem "proletarian coll." der 1920er zu, was nicht unbedingt mit den sonstigen Fundstücken übereinstimmt.
Ich würde vorschlagen, den Eintrag beizubehalten (falls doch jemand ratlos über eine der englischen Maden stolpert), "as mute as a maggot" aber (um von der Ü-Richtung de->en abzuraten) als dated, rare o.ä. zu kennzeichnen. |
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