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- From: sav@nanette.sni.de (Dr.Savory)
- Subject: Re: Whence "Steal Thunder"?
- Sender: news@nixpbe.sni.de (Martin Boening)
- Message-ID: <sav.711785360@nanette>
- Date: Wed, 22 Jul 1992 06:09:20 GMT
- References: <73Rf029O18cA01@JUTS.ccc.amdahl.com> <sav.711190731@nanette> <168269DE6.DSTEPHEN@cmsa.gmr.com>
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- In <168269DE6.DSTEPHEN@cmsa.gmr.com> DSTEPHEN@cmsa.gmr.com writes:
-
- >In article <sav.711190731@nanette>
- >sav@nanette.sni.de (Dr.Savory) writes:
- >>>What is the origin of the phrase "To steal one's thunder", e.g., to make
- >>>Terry Carroll
- >>>"Then they came upon The Thing."
- >>I believ (Spelling courtesy D.Quayle =B-) that it was originally a german
- >>expression used by musketeers relating to their front-loading blackpowder
- >>rifles. "Thunder" was originally "Zunder", ie the fuse. Thus stealing your
-
- >I thought it was a reference to a Norse myth in which some geezer steals
- >Thor's thunder hammer.
-
- Yes. Of course you are right. In the myth (the prose Edda, actually) Loki
- (Norse role-player for Satan) stole Mjollnir (Thors thunder hammer as you
- call it). I was just trying to see how gullible the net is, by suggesting
- an entirely plausible - but wrong - etymology =B-)
-
- Poch ma chun,
- Stu
-