Text Only
Search Special English

Feel The Pinch: The Pains of Economic Trouble

03 February 2007
Download Audio - MP3 audio clip
Listen in RealAudio audio clip

I'm Susan Clark with the Special English program WORDS AND THEIR STORIES.

(MUSIC)

In the nineteen thirties, a song, "Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?," was very popular in the United States. It was the time of the big Depression. The song had meaning for many people who had lost their jobs.

A dime is a piece of money whose value is one-tenth of a dollar. Today, a dime does not buy much. But it was different in the nineteen thirties. A dime sometimes meant the difference between eating and starving.

The American economy today is much better. Yet, many workers are concerned about losing their jobs as companies re-organize.

Americans have special ways of talking about economic troubles. People in businesses may say they feel the pinch.  Or they may say they are up against it.  Or, if things are really bad, they may say they have to throw in the towel.

A pinch is painful pressure. To feel the pinch is to suffer painful pressure involving money.

The expression, feel the pinch, has been used since the sixteenth century. The famous English writer William Shakespeare wrote something very close to this in his great play "King Lear."

King Lear says he would accept necessity's sharp pinch. He means he would have to do without many of the things he always had.

Much later, the Times of London newspaper used the expression about bad economic times during the eighteen sixties. It said, "so much money having been spent ... All classes felt the pinch."

Worse than feeling the pinch is being up against it.  The saying means to be in a lot of trouble.

Word expert James Rogers says the word "it" in the saying can mean any and all difficulties. He says the saying became popular in the United States and Canada in the late nineteenth century. Writer George Ade used it in a book called "Artie." He wrote, "I saw I was up against it."

Sometimes a business that is up against it will have to throw in the towel.  This means to accept defeat or surrender.

Throwing in the towel may mean that a company will have to declare bankruptcy. The company will have to take legal steps to let people know it has no money to pay its debts.

Word expert Charles Funk says an eighteen seventy-four publication called the Slang Dictionary explains throwing in the towel. It says the words probably come from the sport of boxing, or prizefighting. The book says the saying began because a competitor's face was cleaned with a cloth towel or other material. When a boxer's towel was thrown, it meant he was admitting defeat.

Most businesses do not throw in the towel. They just re-organize so they can compete better.

(MUSIC)

This WORDS AND THEIR STORIES was written by Jeri Watson. I'm Susan Clark.

emailme.gif E-mail this article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version
  Featured Story
The Castillo de San Marcos: Ships, Explorers, Pirate Attacks and Wars  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Study Looks at Mental Disorders in College-Age Adults  Audio Clip Available
Adding Up the Many Dangers of Tobacco -- and Finding New Ones  Audio Clip Available
Australia Aims for Cleaner Coal  Audio Clip Available
Looking for Energy in Algae  Audio Clip Available
Kennedy Center Honors Six Artists for Life's Work  Audio Clip Available
Henry Loomis, 1919-2008: Director of VOA Had Idea to Create Special English  Audio Clip Available
Similarities, but Also Big Differences, Between Today's Crisis and 1930s  Audio Clip Available
Obama Chooses Economic Team for 'Historic' Crisis  Audio Clip Available
More and More Americans Bike Their Way to Work  Audio Clip Available
US History: As Jackson Aims to Shut Bank, an Economic Crisis Results  Audio Clip Available
Foreign Student Series: Thanksgiving in the US  Audio Clip Available
Four More People Who Are Making a Difference  Audio Clip Available