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Flogging a dead horse

Idiom about futile effort


Idiom about futile effort

Flogging a dead horse (or beating a dead horse in American English) is an idiom meaning that a particular effort is futile.

Early usage

The expression is said to have been popularized by the English politician and orator John Bright. Speaking in the House of Commons in March 1859 on Bright's efforts to promote parliamentary reform, Lord Elcho remarked that Bright had not been "satisfied with the results of his winter campaign" and that "a saying was attributed to him [Bright] that he [had] found he was 'flogging a dead horse'."

The earliest instance cited in the Oxford English Dictionary dates from 1872, when The Globe newspaper, reporting the Prime Minister, William Gladstone's, futile efforts to defend the Ecclesiastical Courts and Registries Bill in the Commons, observed that he "might be said to have rehearsed that particularly lively operation known as flogging a dead horse".

Criticism and proposed replacement by PETA

In 2018, the organization People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) campaigned for the general public to cease usage of the idiom, along with other idioms which mentioned animals, to "remove speciesism from daily conversation". As an alternative, PETA proposed that the general public replace "beating a dead horse" with "feeding a fed horse". PETA justified the replacement by claiming on Twitter that in the same way, "as it became unacceptable to use racist, homophobic, or ableist language, phrases that trivialize cruelty to animals will vanish as more people begin to appreciate animals for who they are and start 'bringing home the bagels' instead of the bacon."

PETA faced ridicule for the suggestion, such as from late night comedy hosts, Stephen Colbert and Seth Meyers.

References

References

  1. {{OED. horse
  2. (2018-12-06). "Stephen Colbert and Seth Meyers weigh in on PETA's 'anti-animal' phrases".
  3. Thompson, Rachel. (2018-12-05). "The internet mocks PETA after it suggests we stop using 'anti-animal' idioms".
  4. {{OED. dead horse
  5. (1872-08-01). "In the House". [[The Globe (London newspaper).
  6. (1859-03-28). "Second Reading". Official Report of debates in Parliament.
  7. Park, Thomas. (1810). "The Harleian Miscellany".
  8. Simmons, Alfred. (2012-06-10). "Old England and New Zealand". Forgotten Books.
  9. Sophocles. "Antigone".
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