The English Oracle

Origin of the phrase "under your belt"?

--------------------------------------------------
Hire the world's top talent on demand or became one of them at Toptal: https://topt.al/25cXVn
and get $2,000 discount on your first invoice
--------------------------------------------------

Music by Eric Matyas
https://www.soundimage.org
Track title: Unforgiving Himalayas Looping

--

Chapters
00:00 Origin Of The Phrase &Quot;Under Your Belt&Quot;?
00:36 Accepted Answer Score 7
01:44 Answer 2 Score 6
02:27 Answer 3 Score 5
02:56 Answer 4 Score 3
03:07 Thank you

--

Full question
https://english.stackexchange.com/questi...

--

Content licensed under CC BY-SA
https://meta.stackexchange.com/help/lice...

--

Tags
#etymology #idioms

#avk47



ACCEPTED ANSWER

Score 7


The Online Etymological Dictionary says:

To get something under (one's) belt is to get it into one's stomach.

The Oxford English Dictionary says:

Colloq. phr. under one's belt, in one's stomach. Also fig.

Their first three citations are:

  • 1839 The Spirit of the Times: Away we went, each bearing, under his belt, his full share of the antifogmatical?compound.
  • 1938 A Dictionary of American English on historical principles: Belt, v.? To put under one's belt; to swallow.
  • 1954 The Manchester Guardian Weekly: His wife had 135,000 miles driving in the States under her belt?but was still failed.

Here's three earlier literal examples, all about a lot of alcohol under one's belt.

  • 1762's The Young Hypocrite by Samuel Foote:

MAZURE. How can that be .' Can wine, that takes the ' senses away, restore them. again? COUNT. Pshaw ! you talk like a milkfop, Mr. Mayor f Why, I am never fo sensible, as when I am foaking ; with six bottles under my belt I am sit to

  • 1790's The Expedition of Humphry Clinker by Tobias Smollett (first published 1771):

At half an hour past eight in the evening, he was carried home with six good bottles of claret under his belt; and it being then Friday. he gave orders that he should not be disturbed till Sunday at noon.

  • 1817's Ormond, a tale by Maria Edgeworth:

For his own part, it was his established rule never to go to bed without a proper quantity of liquor under his belt ; but he defied the universe to say he was ever known to be drunk.




ANSWER 2

Score 6


The literal meaning of having something under your belt is having it in your stomach, but it’s probably more frequently used figuratively, to mean having acquired something, often intellectual. For example, the OED has these two supporting citations, from the English novelists P G Wodehouse (1954) and John Wain (1962):

Just as you have got Hamlet and Macbeth under your belt

He wanted me to get plenty of Latin and Greek under the belt so that I could be like him.

Below the belt has a quite different meaning. It’s from the language of boxing, where the rules forbid hitting the lower abdomen. It, too, can be used figuratively to describe other kinds of unfair act.




ANSWER 3

Score 5


The phrase seems to be of Scottish origin. As Hugo found, most of the earliest uses of the phrase have to do with alcohol consumption. I did find this earlier figurative use of the phrase however from The History Of The Church And State Of Scotland, 1753 (date check):

https://books.google.com/books?id=mQM-AAAAcAAJ&q=mdccliii#v=snippet&q=belt&f=false

It appears the figurative sense of under one's belt to mean owned or "contained by" goes back even further as evidenced by this old Scottish saying from A Complete Collection of Scotish Proverbs, 1721:

enter image description here




ANSWER 4

Score 3


Under your belt means --

"to have learned or succeeded in something which might be an advantage in the future."

e.g. Basic computer skills are a good thing to have under your belt.