The Bee's Knees - Wiktionary

Jump to content

Contents

move to sidebar hide
  • Beginning
  • 1 English Toggle English subsection
    • 1.1 Etymology
    • 1.2 Pronunciation
    • 1.3 Noun
      • 1.3.1 Translations
    • 1.4 References
    • 1.5 Further reading
  • Entry
  • Discussion
English
  • Read
  • Edit
  • View history
Tools Tools move to sidebar hide Actions
  • Read
  • Edit
  • View history
General
  • What links here
  • Related changes
  • Upload file
  • Page information
  • Cite this page
  • Get shortened URL
Print/export
  • Create a book
  • Download as PDF
  • Printable version
In other projects Appearance move to sidebar hide From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

[edit]
A user suggests that this English entry be moved, merged or split, giving the reason: “move to bee's knees: like shits for "the shits".”.
Please see the discussion on Requests for moves, mergers and splits(+) or the talk page for more information and remove this template after the request has been fulfilled.

Etymology

[edit]

Attested since 1922, of unclear origin.[1] There are several suggested origins, but it most likely arose in imitation of the numerous animal-related nonsense phrases popular in the 1920s such as the cat's pyjamas, cat's whiskers, cat's meow, gnat's elbow, monkey's eyebrows etc.[2][3][4]

A popular folk etymology has the phrase referring to the world champion dancer Bee Jackson.[5] Another suggestion is that the phrase is a corruption of business.[4][6] The singular bee's knee is attested from the late 18th century meaning something small or insignificant in the phrase big as a bee's knee. Also as weak as a bee's knee is attested in Ireland (1870). It is possible that the bee's knees is a deliberate inversion of this meaning but is not attested.[6] Another possibility is that this is a reference to the (visible) blobs of pollen in bees' corbiculae.

Pronunciation

[edit]
  • Audio (General Australian):(file)

Noun

[edit]

the bee's knees pl (plural only)

  1. (idiomatic, colloquial, dated) Something or someone excellent, surpassingly wonderful, or cool. Synonyms: cat's meow, cat's pyjamas, dog's bollocks, the bomb; see also Thesaurus:best We had strawberry shortcake for breakfast on Saturday and the kids thought it was the bee’s knees. I used to play in a band when I was younger. We had a few fans and we thought we were the bee’s knees.
  2. Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see bee,‎ -'s,‎ knee. Corbiculae.

Translations

[edit] something excellent, outstanding
  • Chinese: Mandarin: 好極了 / 好极了 (hǎo jíle), 很棒 (hěn bàng)
  • Danish: please add this translation if you can
  • Dutch: jé van hét, neusje van de zalm
  • Finnish: maailman paras juttu
  • French: c'est le must (colloquial), le nec plus ultra (standard)
  • German: das Gelbe vom Ei (de)
  • Hungarian: csúcs (hu), legjobb (hu), legklasszabb, legmenőbb
  • Italian: il meglio del meglio
  • Portuguese: fora de série (pt) (colloquial), do balacobaco (pt) (slang, dated)
  • Russian: отпад (ru) m (otpad) (colloquial)
  • Spanish: la mamá de Tarzán (referring to people, Hispano America), lo más, la hostia (colloquial, Spain), la leche (colloquial, Spain), la polla (vulgar, Spain), la repera (colloquial, Spain), la neta (colloquial, Mexico), las perlas de la virgen (colloquial, Mexico)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Eric Partridge, A Dictionary of Catch Phrases, p. 45, Routledge, 1986 →ISBN.
  2. ^ Gary Martin (1997–), “The-bees-knees”, in The Phrase Finder.
  3. ^ Michael Quinion (1996–2026), “The bee's knees”, in World Wide Words.
  4. ↑ 4.0 4.1 Harry Oliver, Bees' Knees and Barmy Armies: Origins of the Words and Phrases We Use Every Day, John Blake Publishing Ltd, 2011 →ISBN
  5. ^ Alison Westwood, The Little Book of Clichés, Canary Press eBooks →ISBN.
  6. ↑ 6.0 6.1 Robert Allen, Allen's Dictionary of English Phrases, Penguin UK, 2008 →ISBN.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Mark Israel, alt.usage.english FAQ
  • Kevin Cook, Dubbel Dutch, Kemper Conseil Publishing, 2001, p. 222
  • Michael Quinion (2004), “The bee's knees”, in Ballyhoo, Buckaroo, and Spuds: Ingenious Tales of Words and Their Origins, Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Books in association with Penguin Books, →ISBN.
Retrieved from "https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=the_bee%27s_knees&oldid=89033224" Categories:
  • English terms with audio pronunciation
  • English lemmas
  • English nouns
  • English multiword terms
  • English pluralia tantum
  • English idioms
  • English colloquialisms
  • English dated terms
  • English terms with usage examples
  • English reduplications
  • English rhyming phrases
Hidden categories:
  • Requests for moves, mergers and splits
  • Requests for attention concerning English
  • Pages with entries
  • Pages with 1 entry
  • Entries with translation boxes
  • Terms with Mandarin translations
  • Mandarin terms with non-redundant manual transliterations
  • Requests for translations into Danish
  • Terms with Dutch translations
  • Terms with Finnish translations
  • Terms with French translations
  • Terms with German translations
  • Terms with Hungarian translations
  • Terms with Italian translations
  • Terms with Portuguese translations
  • Terms with Russian translations
  • Terms with Spanish translations
Search Search Toggle the table of contents the bee's knees 4 languages Add topic

Tag » What Does Bees Knees Mean