What's the origin of the saying “know your onions”?












10















In French, there's the expression occupez-vous de vos oignons which means "mind your own business" in English but can be literally translated as "take care of your onions".



Know your onions however means to be knowledgeable about a subject - a meaning which is clearly distinct from the French saying.



But what's its origin? I'd really love to know.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    I'll upvote the question because it would be interesting. But be warned even OED says "Origin unknown" (and they don't think any suggestions are credible enough to even mention). But it's interesting that "Ruth", in the first recorded use in 1922 goes on to use the quite-new slang term lounge lizard. Making me think this one probably hasn't got rustic/horticultural origins. "Hip" metropolitan neologism, is my guess.

    – FumbleFingers
    May 30 '13 at 1:26











  • As a speaker of Italian I do like the Italian: I know my chickens, which is similar but has different connotations. It means: I know this group of people (whom I might be in charge of) like the back of my hand. :) forum.wordreference.com/showthread.php?t=207603

    – Mari-Lou A
    May 30 '13 at 7:07













  • I'm not particularly familiar with the expression -- maybe heard it once or twice (in the US Midwest), but that's it.

    – Hot Licks
    Jan 23 '16 at 1:41
















10















In French, there's the expression occupez-vous de vos oignons which means "mind your own business" in English but can be literally translated as "take care of your onions".



Know your onions however means to be knowledgeable about a subject - a meaning which is clearly distinct from the French saying.



But what's its origin? I'd really love to know.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    I'll upvote the question because it would be interesting. But be warned even OED says "Origin unknown" (and they don't think any suggestions are credible enough to even mention). But it's interesting that "Ruth", in the first recorded use in 1922 goes on to use the quite-new slang term lounge lizard. Making me think this one probably hasn't got rustic/horticultural origins. "Hip" metropolitan neologism, is my guess.

    – FumbleFingers
    May 30 '13 at 1:26











  • As a speaker of Italian I do like the Italian: I know my chickens, which is similar but has different connotations. It means: I know this group of people (whom I might be in charge of) like the back of my hand. :) forum.wordreference.com/showthread.php?t=207603

    – Mari-Lou A
    May 30 '13 at 7:07













  • I'm not particularly familiar with the expression -- maybe heard it once or twice (in the US Midwest), but that's it.

    – Hot Licks
    Jan 23 '16 at 1:41














10












10








10


2






In French, there's the expression occupez-vous de vos oignons which means "mind your own business" in English but can be literally translated as "take care of your onions".



Know your onions however means to be knowledgeable about a subject - a meaning which is clearly distinct from the French saying.



But what's its origin? I'd really love to know.










share|improve this question
















In French, there's the expression occupez-vous de vos oignons which means "mind your own business" in English but can be literally translated as "take care of your onions".



Know your onions however means to be knowledgeable about a subject - a meaning which is clearly distinct from the French saying.



But what's its origin? I'd really love to know.







popular-refrains






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 29 '13 at 23:53









Brian Hooper

29.1k45129232




29.1k45129232










asked May 29 '13 at 20:27







user15851















  • 1





    I'll upvote the question because it would be interesting. But be warned even OED says "Origin unknown" (and they don't think any suggestions are credible enough to even mention). But it's interesting that "Ruth", in the first recorded use in 1922 goes on to use the quite-new slang term lounge lizard. Making me think this one probably hasn't got rustic/horticultural origins. "Hip" metropolitan neologism, is my guess.

    – FumbleFingers
    May 30 '13 at 1:26











  • As a speaker of Italian I do like the Italian: I know my chickens, which is similar but has different connotations. It means: I know this group of people (whom I might be in charge of) like the back of my hand. :) forum.wordreference.com/showthread.php?t=207603

    – Mari-Lou A
    May 30 '13 at 7:07













  • I'm not particularly familiar with the expression -- maybe heard it once or twice (in the US Midwest), but that's it.

    – Hot Licks
    Jan 23 '16 at 1:41














  • 1





    I'll upvote the question because it would be interesting. But be warned even OED says "Origin unknown" (and they don't think any suggestions are credible enough to even mention). But it's interesting that "Ruth", in the first recorded use in 1922 goes on to use the quite-new slang term lounge lizard. Making me think this one probably hasn't got rustic/horticultural origins. "Hip" metropolitan neologism, is my guess.

    – FumbleFingers
    May 30 '13 at 1:26











  • As a speaker of Italian I do like the Italian: I know my chickens, which is similar but has different connotations. It means: I know this group of people (whom I might be in charge of) like the back of my hand. :) forum.wordreference.com/showthread.php?t=207603

    – Mari-Lou A
    May 30 '13 at 7:07













  • I'm not particularly familiar with the expression -- maybe heard it once or twice (in the US Midwest), but that's it.

    – Hot Licks
    Jan 23 '16 at 1:41








1




1





I'll upvote the question because it would be interesting. But be warned even OED says "Origin unknown" (and they don't think any suggestions are credible enough to even mention). But it's interesting that "Ruth", in the first recorded use in 1922 goes on to use the quite-new slang term lounge lizard. Making me think this one probably hasn't got rustic/horticultural origins. "Hip" metropolitan neologism, is my guess.

– FumbleFingers
May 30 '13 at 1:26





I'll upvote the question because it would be interesting. But be warned even OED says "Origin unknown" (and they don't think any suggestions are credible enough to even mention). But it's interesting that "Ruth", in the first recorded use in 1922 goes on to use the quite-new slang term lounge lizard. Making me think this one probably hasn't got rustic/horticultural origins. "Hip" metropolitan neologism, is my guess.

– FumbleFingers
May 30 '13 at 1:26













As a speaker of Italian I do like the Italian: I know my chickens, which is similar but has different connotations. It means: I know this group of people (whom I might be in charge of) like the back of my hand. :) forum.wordreference.com/showthread.php?t=207603

– Mari-Lou A
May 30 '13 at 7:07







As a speaker of Italian I do like the Italian: I know my chickens, which is similar but has different connotations. It means: I know this group of people (whom I might be in charge of) like the back of my hand. :) forum.wordreference.com/showthread.php?t=207603

– Mari-Lou A
May 30 '13 at 7:07















I'm not particularly familiar with the expression -- maybe heard it once or twice (in the US Midwest), but that's it.

– Hot Licks
Jan 23 '16 at 1:41





I'm not particularly familiar with the expression -- maybe heard it once or twice (in the US Midwest), but that's it.

– Hot Licks
Jan 23 '16 at 1:41










7 Answers
7






active

oldest

votes


















7














This is an American phrase, first recorded in the May 1922 edition of Harpers Magazine:




"Mr. Roberts knows his onions, all right."




According to World Wide Words, this had nothing to do with any Mr. Onions, but:




The crucial fact is that the expression isn’t British
but American, first recorded in the magazine
Harper’s Bazaar in March 1922. It was one of a set
of such phrases, all with the sense of knowing
one’s stuff, or being highly knowledgeable in a
particular field, that circulated in the 1920s. Others were to know one’s oats, to know one’s
oil, to know one’s apples, to know one’s eggs,
and even to know one’s sweet potatoes (which
appeared in a cartoon by T A Dorgan in 1928).
You may notice certain similarities between the
substances mentioned, most being foods and most having names that start with a vowel.



They contain much of the verbal inventiveness
and mildly juvenile wordplay that characterises
another American linguistic fad of the flapper
period, that of describing something excellent of
its kind in terms of an area of an animal’s
anatomy (elephant’s instep, gnat’s elbows and about a hundred others — see my piece on bee’s knees for more).



As with bee’s knees, one of these multifarious
forms eventually triumphed and became a
catchphrase that has survived to the present day.




The Phrase Finder agrees:




Other phrases that refer to
knowing - 'know the ropes', 'doesn't know shit from Shinola' etc. allude to specific items as
the focus of the knowledge.
Other 1920s variants of 'know
your onions' are 'know your oil/
oats/apples' etc. The only one that caught on and
is still in common use is 'know your onions'. So, why onions? Well, as the citation above asks -
why not? Explanations that relate the phrase to
knowledgeable vegetable gardeners, or even to C.
T. or S. G. Onions, are just trying too hard. 1920s
America was a breeding ground for wacky
phrases (see the bee's knees for some examples) and this is just another of those.






Edit: A tantalising snippet in Google Books shows this may have been used in 1908 in a humorous poem in The Postal Record (Volumes 21-22 - Page 27). It' shown in the summary, and is interesting as the year 1908 is also shown. Care must be taken with snippets, as they're sometimes incorrectly dated, but here it is anyway:




But, never mind; Billy knows his onions, He Is not troubled with corns or bunions. He travels along at a good, fair gait; Unless the roads are bad, he Is never late. O. 8. WHITE. WHkesbarre, January 1, 1908. West Hoboken, N. J. At the regular meeting of Branch 1065, held on January 10, 1908, it was honored by the presence of Brother Kelly, President of our National Association.







share|improve this answer

































    2














    I find The Phrase Finder's explanation most persuasive:




    The English grammarian and lexicographer C. T. (Charles Talbut) Onions
    was an editor of the Oxford English Dictionary from 1895 and continued
    to write reference works throughout a long and distinguished career.
    His last work was The Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology, 1966,
    which was published a year after his death. If I knew as much
    etymology as he did I could certainly claim to 'know my onions', and
    it is tempting to assume that this is where the phrase originated.



    If the 'onions' referred to in the phrase is indeed human rather than
    vegetable, there is another Mr. Onions that could be our man. S. G.
    Onions (they were strong on initials in those days) created sets of
    coins which were issued to English schools from 1843 onwards. These
    were teaching aids intended to help children learn £.s.d. (pounds,
    shillings and pence). They looked similar to real coins and had
    inscriptions like '4 Farthings make 1 Penny' or, as in the example
    pictured, '12 Pence make 1 shilling'. We can imagine that 'knowing
    your Onions' might be coined, so to speak, in those circumstances.



    The first known use of 'know your onions' in print, in the 1920s,
    tends to argue against either of the above men being involved. While it is true that the phrase originated at a time when C. T.
    Onions had established a reputation, the match between the phrase and
    his name is just a coincidence. Know your onions is in fact an
    American phrase. There are many references to it in print there from
    the 1920s onward, but none in the UK or elsewhere until the middle of
    the century.




    The Phrase Finder goes on to conclude:




    1920s America was a breeding ground for wacky phrases (see the bee's
    knees
    ) and know your onions is just another of those.




    It's worth visiting The Phrase Finder to read the full explanation, which includes a link to other phrases that were coined in the USA.






    share|improve this answer































      2














      In the days of wooden walled sailing ships - with no fridges or freezers - onions were a key part of the crew's staple diet. They provided vital protein and vitamins. Moreover, they would keep for a long time provided they were kept dry and in a dark space.



      The ship's 'Purser' or 'Pusser' was responsible for storing the ship before sailing and very often he would purchase the necessary victuals from local markets. It was thus vital that the Purser could assess the quality of the food supplies that he was buying - a good Purser would 'know his onions'






      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        According to publicly available nutrition data, a medium onion contains about 4% of the average person's daily protein requirement. That means someone would have to eat 25 onions a day to get enough protein (and it's not even "complete" protein). The largest portion of RDA for vitamins for an onion is 20% for Vitamin C, so that would at least be of some benefit (and a person would only have to eat 5 onions). But onions do sprout over not too long a time, so it is questionable how long they'd last on a sea voyage.

        – Robusto
        Sep 18 '18 at 14:50



















      0














      I don't know but have always been told that it is was a phrase that started among actors. C.T Onions wrote the first comprehensive glossary of Shakespeare's words. If an actor could speak his part without asking what a word meant he knew his onions. David Crystal has since compiled a more extensive glossary and if I'm working on a Shakespeare play I take it with me. I know my Onions but I don't know all my Crystal.






      share|improve this answer
























      • This would be an exceptional answer if you could include a source or two! :)

        – anongoodnurse
        Feb 8 '14 at 8:08



















      0














      The phrase 'to know one's onion(s)' first appeared in print at least as early as 1891. Given its historical linguistic context, the 'source' of the phrase may be construed as the independent adoption of a generalized idiomatic response to the equally idiomatic and earlier-evidenced declaration that someone 'does not know the difference between an onion and [another object, commonly another vegetable]'. Both phrases, but particularly the latter, vary freely in individual use, but are loosely formulaic.1



      OED (paywalled) defines 'to know one's onions' as "to be experienced in or knowledgeable about something". The OED entry only mentions the plural variant "onions", attested from 1908 (note the slightly earlier appearance of the attestation shown in the compilation below, from January 1908 as compared to February):




      1908 Postal Rec. Feb. 27/3 Never mind: Billy knows his onions. He is not troubled with corns or bunions.




      The singular variant "onion" was, however, as far as I have discovered, the only variant in print up to 1908. The singular continued in frequent use into the 1920s, when the plural variant gradually came to dominate use. By the mid-1920s, the plural variant was used almost if not entirely exclusively.2





      Early attestation of 'know one's onion(s)'



      Early appearances of the phrase 'know one's onions' are a regionalism centered on and predominantly from Pennsylvania. Occasionally, instances from surrounding states (New York, Delaware, and New Jersey) appear, with only one outlier (from Washington State).



      All links are paywalled unless otherwise noted.



      The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 22 May 1891, Page 1:




      Say, Garrett, don't part with Ely, if you know your onion, and we believe you do.




      The Evening Journal (Wilmington, Delaware) 06 May 1892, Page 2:




      I know my onion, chappies, and doncher forget it — see?




      The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 29 Feb 1892, Page 1:




      You don't know your onion, Stackey; you oughtn't to pull me in.




      The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 05 Apr 1894, Page 1:




      This trolley knows her onion and don't you forget it.




      The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) 15 Jun 1898, Page 4:




      You must "know your onion" to get your money on right.




      The Evening Democrat (Warren, Pennsylvania) 27 Jun 1899, Page 4:




      He is a big and busy bug and he knows his own onion and lights on it.




      The Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Seattle, Washington)
      04 Feb 1900, Page 28:




      In cooking onions it is well to first know your onion.




      Buffalo Courier (Buffalo, New York) 14 Apr 1900, Page 4:




      According to the Binghamton Herald, there is one man in this State who knows 'his onion' as the tough boy says; you can't fool him.




      The Selinsgrove Times-Tribune (Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania) 20 May 1903, Page 1:




      The people may criticise and damn the old man, but he always knows his onion and rarely makes a mistake.




      The New York Times (New York, New York)
      07 Jun 1903, Page 6:




      "He Knows His Onion."
      To the Editor of The New York Times:

      Apropos of the discussion of the meaning and origin of "makes no bones," will some slang etymologist let us know the origin and connection of "he knows his onion," meaning he minds his own affairs, or is posted about certain pertinent situstions?




      Republican News Item (Laport, Pennsylvania) 25 Jun 1903, Page 1:




      The Experimental farmer comes down strong on the butter business, and when he talks about leeks, we have nothing more to say in advice, for it is plain to see that "he knows his onion."




      The Index (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) 26 Nov 1904, Page 7 (not paywalled):




      Not if he knows his onion, and he thinks he does.




      Lewisburg Journal (Lewisburg, Pennsylvania) 06 Oct 1905, Page 7:




      I know my onion.




      Wilkes-Barre Times (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania)
      18 May 1907, Page 4 [blurb headline]:




      Knows His Onion




      The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 26 Oct 1907, Page 11:




      It isn't wise for a policeman to say "I never saw the beat." He knows his "onion!" If he made such a remark, in all probability he would not "turn-up" again. He'd get it in the Adam's "apple." That's all!




      The Wilkes-Barre Record (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania)
      02 Jan 1908, Page 4:




      But never mind, Billy knows his onions,

      He is not troubled with corns or bunions,

      He travels along at a good fair gait;

      Unless the roads are bad, he is never late.

        O.S. White, (Letter Carrier No. 9),

        48 Carey Avenue, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.






      Early attestation of 'does not know an onion from a ——'



      The Scottsboro Citizen (Scottsboro, Alabama) 01 Feb 1883, Page 2:




      The Chattanooga Democrat intimates that a man who doesn't know an onion from a grindstone ought not to have been appointed commissioner of agriculture of Tennessee.




      Ellsworth Messenger (Ellsworth, Kansas) 15 Apr 1885, Page 1:




      If he should take his garden down to his Great Steam Printing Shop, he had better take Jimmy Jarvis along to weed it, for he himself would not know an onion from a bull nettle.




      The Gazette (Montreal, Canada) 22 Jun 1888, Page 8:




      He did not know an onion from a cabbage.




      Woodland Daily Democrat (Woodland, California)
      22 Jul 1890, Page 3:




      Thad Spaulding and family are there also, and Thad wouldn't know an onion from a potato to-day.




      Northumberland County Democrat (Sunbury, Pennsylvania) 19 Sep 1890, Page 2:




      Now that fairs are opening we raise to remark that the horse jockey, who does not know an onion from a turnip, generally gets away with more than his share of the boodle.




      The Brooklyn Daily Eagle (Brooklyn, New York) 29 Oct 1899, Page 25:




      She didn't know onions from lamp wicks and bunions;

      A clam from a lobster, or crab from an eel!






      1. For purposes of definition, the formula underlying the former phrase is "know(s) one's X", and the formula of the latter phrase is "do(es) not know the difference between X and Y".
      2. I do not know why the plural variant came to be preferred to the exclusion of the singular. As a matter of speculation, I observe that I am slightly more uncomfortable with the ill-defined referent of the metaphorical "onion" than I am with the equally ill-defined referents of the metaphorical "onions". My mild discomfort may be due to what I consider the stronger likelihood of inappropriate interpretations of "onion" than of "onions".





      share































        -1














        Vince Kosuga captured the onion futures market in 1955-56 and enjoyed a monopoly of that culinary necessity. He knew his onions.






        share|improve this answer































          -2














          An old small time grocery store owner named Tommy Campbell in McGraw, NY used to tell all of us kids that bought candy from the store that we knew our onions. This was approximately 1965. I remember asking my father what the expression meant. He told me that he was probably short changing us. For example giving him a nickel for 4 cents worth of candy and being told you know your onions instead of getting the penny change back. While in college in the early 1980's I bought a copy of " The Dictionary of American Slang ". I no longer have possession of the book yet my memory recalls what my father had told me.Making you feel good about the transaction yet actually having "the wool pulled over your eyes".






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            7 Answers
            7






            active

            oldest

            votes








            7 Answers
            7






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

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            active

            oldest

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            7














            This is an American phrase, first recorded in the May 1922 edition of Harpers Magazine:




            "Mr. Roberts knows his onions, all right."




            According to World Wide Words, this had nothing to do with any Mr. Onions, but:




            The crucial fact is that the expression isn’t British
            but American, first recorded in the magazine
            Harper’s Bazaar in March 1922. It was one of a set
            of such phrases, all with the sense of knowing
            one’s stuff, or being highly knowledgeable in a
            particular field, that circulated in the 1920s. Others were to know one’s oats, to know one’s
            oil, to know one’s apples, to know one’s eggs,
            and even to know one’s sweet potatoes (which
            appeared in a cartoon by T A Dorgan in 1928).
            You may notice certain similarities between the
            substances mentioned, most being foods and most having names that start with a vowel.



            They contain much of the verbal inventiveness
            and mildly juvenile wordplay that characterises
            another American linguistic fad of the flapper
            period, that of describing something excellent of
            its kind in terms of an area of an animal’s
            anatomy (elephant’s instep, gnat’s elbows and about a hundred others — see my piece on bee’s knees for more).



            As with bee’s knees, one of these multifarious
            forms eventually triumphed and became a
            catchphrase that has survived to the present day.




            The Phrase Finder agrees:




            Other phrases that refer to
            knowing - 'know the ropes', 'doesn't know shit from Shinola' etc. allude to specific items as
            the focus of the knowledge.
            Other 1920s variants of 'know
            your onions' are 'know your oil/
            oats/apples' etc. The only one that caught on and
            is still in common use is 'know your onions'. So, why onions? Well, as the citation above asks -
            why not? Explanations that relate the phrase to
            knowledgeable vegetable gardeners, or even to C.
            T. or S. G. Onions, are just trying too hard. 1920s
            America was a breeding ground for wacky
            phrases (see the bee's knees for some examples) and this is just another of those.






            Edit: A tantalising snippet in Google Books shows this may have been used in 1908 in a humorous poem in The Postal Record (Volumes 21-22 - Page 27). It' shown in the summary, and is interesting as the year 1908 is also shown. Care must be taken with snippets, as they're sometimes incorrectly dated, but here it is anyway:




            But, never mind; Billy knows his onions, He Is not troubled with corns or bunions. He travels along at a good, fair gait; Unless the roads are bad, he Is never late. O. 8. WHITE. WHkesbarre, January 1, 1908. West Hoboken, N. J. At the regular meeting of Branch 1065, held on January 10, 1908, it was honored by the presence of Brother Kelly, President of our National Association.







            share|improve this answer






























              7














              This is an American phrase, first recorded in the May 1922 edition of Harpers Magazine:




              "Mr. Roberts knows his onions, all right."




              According to World Wide Words, this had nothing to do with any Mr. Onions, but:




              The crucial fact is that the expression isn’t British
              but American, first recorded in the magazine
              Harper’s Bazaar in March 1922. It was one of a set
              of such phrases, all with the sense of knowing
              one’s stuff, or being highly knowledgeable in a
              particular field, that circulated in the 1920s. Others were to know one’s oats, to know one’s
              oil, to know one’s apples, to know one’s eggs,
              and even to know one’s sweet potatoes (which
              appeared in a cartoon by T A Dorgan in 1928).
              You may notice certain similarities between the
              substances mentioned, most being foods and most having names that start with a vowel.



              They contain much of the verbal inventiveness
              and mildly juvenile wordplay that characterises
              another American linguistic fad of the flapper
              period, that of describing something excellent of
              its kind in terms of an area of an animal’s
              anatomy (elephant’s instep, gnat’s elbows and about a hundred others — see my piece on bee’s knees for more).



              As with bee’s knees, one of these multifarious
              forms eventually triumphed and became a
              catchphrase that has survived to the present day.




              The Phrase Finder agrees:




              Other phrases that refer to
              knowing - 'know the ropes', 'doesn't know shit from Shinola' etc. allude to specific items as
              the focus of the knowledge.
              Other 1920s variants of 'know
              your onions' are 'know your oil/
              oats/apples' etc. The only one that caught on and
              is still in common use is 'know your onions'. So, why onions? Well, as the citation above asks -
              why not? Explanations that relate the phrase to
              knowledgeable vegetable gardeners, or even to C.
              T. or S. G. Onions, are just trying too hard. 1920s
              America was a breeding ground for wacky
              phrases (see the bee's knees for some examples) and this is just another of those.






              Edit: A tantalising snippet in Google Books shows this may have been used in 1908 in a humorous poem in The Postal Record (Volumes 21-22 - Page 27). It' shown in the summary, and is interesting as the year 1908 is also shown. Care must be taken with snippets, as they're sometimes incorrectly dated, but here it is anyway:




              But, never mind; Billy knows his onions, He Is not troubled with corns or bunions. He travels along at a good, fair gait; Unless the roads are bad, he Is never late. O. 8. WHITE. WHkesbarre, January 1, 1908. West Hoboken, N. J. At the regular meeting of Branch 1065, held on January 10, 1908, it was honored by the presence of Brother Kelly, President of our National Association.







              share|improve this answer




























                7












                7








                7







                This is an American phrase, first recorded in the May 1922 edition of Harpers Magazine:




                "Mr. Roberts knows his onions, all right."




                According to World Wide Words, this had nothing to do with any Mr. Onions, but:




                The crucial fact is that the expression isn’t British
                but American, first recorded in the magazine
                Harper’s Bazaar in March 1922. It was one of a set
                of such phrases, all with the sense of knowing
                one’s stuff, or being highly knowledgeable in a
                particular field, that circulated in the 1920s. Others were to know one’s oats, to know one’s
                oil, to know one’s apples, to know one’s eggs,
                and even to know one’s sweet potatoes (which
                appeared in a cartoon by T A Dorgan in 1928).
                You may notice certain similarities between the
                substances mentioned, most being foods and most having names that start with a vowel.



                They contain much of the verbal inventiveness
                and mildly juvenile wordplay that characterises
                another American linguistic fad of the flapper
                period, that of describing something excellent of
                its kind in terms of an area of an animal’s
                anatomy (elephant’s instep, gnat’s elbows and about a hundred others — see my piece on bee’s knees for more).



                As with bee’s knees, one of these multifarious
                forms eventually triumphed and became a
                catchphrase that has survived to the present day.




                The Phrase Finder agrees:




                Other phrases that refer to
                knowing - 'know the ropes', 'doesn't know shit from Shinola' etc. allude to specific items as
                the focus of the knowledge.
                Other 1920s variants of 'know
                your onions' are 'know your oil/
                oats/apples' etc. The only one that caught on and
                is still in common use is 'know your onions'. So, why onions? Well, as the citation above asks -
                why not? Explanations that relate the phrase to
                knowledgeable vegetable gardeners, or even to C.
                T. or S. G. Onions, are just trying too hard. 1920s
                America was a breeding ground for wacky
                phrases (see the bee's knees for some examples) and this is just another of those.






                Edit: A tantalising snippet in Google Books shows this may have been used in 1908 in a humorous poem in The Postal Record (Volumes 21-22 - Page 27). It' shown in the summary, and is interesting as the year 1908 is also shown. Care must be taken with snippets, as they're sometimes incorrectly dated, but here it is anyway:




                But, never mind; Billy knows his onions, He Is not troubled with corns or bunions. He travels along at a good, fair gait; Unless the roads are bad, he Is never late. O. 8. WHITE. WHkesbarre, January 1, 1908. West Hoboken, N. J. At the regular meeting of Branch 1065, held on January 10, 1908, it was honored by the presence of Brother Kelly, President of our National Association.







                share|improve this answer















                This is an American phrase, first recorded in the May 1922 edition of Harpers Magazine:




                "Mr. Roberts knows his onions, all right."




                According to World Wide Words, this had nothing to do with any Mr. Onions, but:




                The crucial fact is that the expression isn’t British
                but American, first recorded in the magazine
                Harper’s Bazaar in March 1922. It was one of a set
                of such phrases, all with the sense of knowing
                one’s stuff, or being highly knowledgeable in a
                particular field, that circulated in the 1920s. Others were to know one’s oats, to know one’s
                oil, to know one’s apples, to know one’s eggs,
                and even to know one’s sweet potatoes (which
                appeared in a cartoon by T A Dorgan in 1928).
                You may notice certain similarities between the
                substances mentioned, most being foods and most having names that start with a vowel.



                They contain much of the verbal inventiveness
                and mildly juvenile wordplay that characterises
                another American linguistic fad of the flapper
                period, that of describing something excellent of
                its kind in terms of an area of an animal’s
                anatomy (elephant’s instep, gnat’s elbows and about a hundred others — see my piece on bee’s knees for more).



                As with bee’s knees, one of these multifarious
                forms eventually triumphed and became a
                catchphrase that has survived to the present day.




                The Phrase Finder agrees:




                Other phrases that refer to
                knowing - 'know the ropes', 'doesn't know shit from Shinola' etc. allude to specific items as
                the focus of the knowledge.
                Other 1920s variants of 'know
                your onions' are 'know your oil/
                oats/apples' etc. The only one that caught on and
                is still in common use is 'know your onions'. So, why onions? Well, as the citation above asks -
                why not? Explanations that relate the phrase to
                knowledgeable vegetable gardeners, or even to C.
                T. or S. G. Onions, are just trying too hard. 1920s
                America was a breeding ground for wacky
                phrases (see the bee's knees for some examples) and this is just another of those.






                Edit: A tantalising snippet in Google Books shows this may have been used in 1908 in a humorous poem in The Postal Record (Volumes 21-22 - Page 27). It' shown in the summary, and is interesting as the year 1908 is also shown. Care must be taken with snippets, as they're sometimes incorrectly dated, but here it is anyway:




                But, never mind; Billy knows his onions, He Is not troubled with corns or bunions. He travels along at a good, fair gait; Unless the roads are bad, he Is never late. O. 8. WHITE. WHkesbarre, January 1, 1908. West Hoboken, N. J. At the regular meeting of Branch 1065, held on January 10, 1908, it was honored by the presence of Brother Kelly, President of our National Association.








                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited May 30 '13 at 12:20

























                answered May 30 '13 at 4:46









                HugoHugo

                58.2k12170269




                58.2k12170269

























                    2














                    I find The Phrase Finder's explanation most persuasive:




                    The English grammarian and lexicographer C. T. (Charles Talbut) Onions
                    was an editor of the Oxford English Dictionary from 1895 and continued
                    to write reference works throughout a long and distinguished career.
                    His last work was The Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology, 1966,
                    which was published a year after his death. If I knew as much
                    etymology as he did I could certainly claim to 'know my onions', and
                    it is tempting to assume that this is where the phrase originated.



                    If the 'onions' referred to in the phrase is indeed human rather than
                    vegetable, there is another Mr. Onions that could be our man. S. G.
                    Onions (they were strong on initials in those days) created sets of
                    coins which were issued to English schools from 1843 onwards. These
                    were teaching aids intended to help children learn £.s.d. (pounds,
                    shillings and pence). They looked similar to real coins and had
                    inscriptions like '4 Farthings make 1 Penny' or, as in the example
                    pictured, '12 Pence make 1 shilling'. We can imagine that 'knowing
                    your Onions' might be coined, so to speak, in those circumstances.



                    The first known use of 'know your onions' in print, in the 1920s,
                    tends to argue against either of the above men being involved. While it is true that the phrase originated at a time when C. T.
                    Onions had established a reputation, the match between the phrase and
                    his name is just a coincidence. Know your onions is in fact an
                    American phrase. There are many references to it in print there from
                    the 1920s onward, but none in the UK or elsewhere until the middle of
                    the century.




                    The Phrase Finder goes on to conclude:




                    1920s America was a breeding ground for wacky phrases (see the bee's
                    knees
                    ) and know your onions is just another of those.




                    It's worth visiting The Phrase Finder to read the full explanation, which includes a link to other phrases that were coined in the USA.






                    share|improve this answer




























                      2














                      I find The Phrase Finder's explanation most persuasive:




                      The English grammarian and lexicographer C. T. (Charles Talbut) Onions
                      was an editor of the Oxford English Dictionary from 1895 and continued
                      to write reference works throughout a long and distinguished career.
                      His last work was The Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology, 1966,
                      which was published a year after his death. If I knew as much
                      etymology as he did I could certainly claim to 'know my onions', and
                      it is tempting to assume that this is where the phrase originated.



                      If the 'onions' referred to in the phrase is indeed human rather than
                      vegetable, there is another Mr. Onions that could be our man. S. G.
                      Onions (they were strong on initials in those days) created sets of
                      coins which were issued to English schools from 1843 onwards. These
                      were teaching aids intended to help children learn £.s.d. (pounds,
                      shillings and pence). They looked similar to real coins and had
                      inscriptions like '4 Farthings make 1 Penny' or, as in the example
                      pictured, '12 Pence make 1 shilling'. We can imagine that 'knowing
                      your Onions' might be coined, so to speak, in those circumstances.



                      The first known use of 'know your onions' in print, in the 1920s,
                      tends to argue against either of the above men being involved. While it is true that the phrase originated at a time when C. T.
                      Onions had established a reputation, the match between the phrase and
                      his name is just a coincidence. Know your onions is in fact an
                      American phrase. There are many references to it in print there from
                      the 1920s onward, but none in the UK or elsewhere until the middle of
                      the century.




                      The Phrase Finder goes on to conclude:




                      1920s America was a breeding ground for wacky phrases (see the bee's
                      knees
                      ) and know your onions is just another of those.




                      It's worth visiting The Phrase Finder to read the full explanation, which includes a link to other phrases that were coined in the USA.






                      share|improve this answer


























                        2












                        2








                        2







                        I find The Phrase Finder's explanation most persuasive:




                        The English grammarian and lexicographer C. T. (Charles Talbut) Onions
                        was an editor of the Oxford English Dictionary from 1895 and continued
                        to write reference works throughout a long and distinguished career.
                        His last work was The Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology, 1966,
                        which was published a year after his death. If I knew as much
                        etymology as he did I could certainly claim to 'know my onions', and
                        it is tempting to assume that this is where the phrase originated.



                        If the 'onions' referred to in the phrase is indeed human rather than
                        vegetable, there is another Mr. Onions that could be our man. S. G.
                        Onions (they were strong on initials in those days) created sets of
                        coins which were issued to English schools from 1843 onwards. These
                        were teaching aids intended to help children learn £.s.d. (pounds,
                        shillings and pence). They looked similar to real coins and had
                        inscriptions like '4 Farthings make 1 Penny' or, as in the example
                        pictured, '12 Pence make 1 shilling'. We can imagine that 'knowing
                        your Onions' might be coined, so to speak, in those circumstances.



                        The first known use of 'know your onions' in print, in the 1920s,
                        tends to argue against either of the above men being involved. While it is true that the phrase originated at a time when C. T.
                        Onions had established a reputation, the match between the phrase and
                        his name is just a coincidence. Know your onions is in fact an
                        American phrase. There are many references to it in print there from
                        the 1920s onward, but none in the UK or elsewhere until the middle of
                        the century.




                        The Phrase Finder goes on to conclude:




                        1920s America was a breeding ground for wacky phrases (see the bee's
                        knees
                        ) and know your onions is just another of those.




                        It's worth visiting The Phrase Finder to read the full explanation, which includes a link to other phrases that were coined in the USA.






                        share|improve this answer













                        I find The Phrase Finder's explanation most persuasive:




                        The English grammarian and lexicographer C. T. (Charles Talbut) Onions
                        was an editor of the Oxford English Dictionary from 1895 and continued
                        to write reference works throughout a long and distinguished career.
                        His last work was The Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology, 1966,
                        which was published a year after his death. If I knew as much
                        etymology as he did I could certainly claim to 'know my onions', and
                        it is tempting to assume that this is where the phrase originated.



                        If the 'onions' referred to in the phrase is indeed human rather than
                        vegetable, there is another Mr. Onions that could be our man. S. G.
                        Onions (they were strong on initials in those days) created sets of
                        coins which were issued to English schools from 1843 onwards. These
                        were teaching aids intended to help children learn £.s.d. (pounds,
                        shillings and pence). They looked similar to real coins and had
                        inscriptions like '4 Farthings make 1 Penny' or, as in the example
                        pictured, '12 Pence make 1 shilling'. We can imagine that 'knowing
                        your Onions' might be coined, so to speak, in those circumstances.



                        The first known use of 'know your onions' in print, in the 1920s,
                        tends to argue against either of the above men being involved. While it is true that the phrase originated at a time when C. T.
                        Onions had established a reputation, the match between the phrase and
                        his name is just a coincidence. Know your onions is in fact an
                        American phrase. There are many references to it in print there from
                        the 1920s onward, but none in the UK or elsewhere until the middle of
                        the century.




                        The Phrase Finder goes on to conclude:




                        1920s America was a breeding ground for wacky phrases (see the bee's
                        knees
                        ) and know your onions is just another of those.




                        It's worth visiting The Phrase Finder to read the full explanation, which includes a link to other phrases that were coined in the USA.







                        share|improve this answer












                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer










                        answered May 30 '13 at 4:38









                        GnawmeGnawme

                        36.7k260103




                        36.7k260103























                            2














                            In the days of wooden walled sailing ships - with no fridges or freezers - onions were a key part of the crew's staple diet. They provided vital protein and vitamins. Moreover, they would keep for a long time provided they were kept dry and in a dark space.



                            The ship's 'Purser' or 'Pusser' was responsible for storing the ship before sailing and very often he would purchase the necessary victuals from local markets. It was thus vital that the Purser could assess the quality of the food supplies that he was buying - a good Purser would 'know his onions'






                            share|improve this answer



















                            • 1





                              According to publicly available nutrition data, a medium onion contains about 4% of the average person's daily protein requirement. That means someone would have to eat 25 onions a day to get enough protein (and it's not even "complete" protein). The largest portion of RDA for vitamins for an onion is 20% for Vitamin C, so that would at least be of some benefit (and a person would only have to eat 5 onions). But onions do sprout over not too long a time, so it is questionable how long they'd last on a sea voyage.

                              – Robusto
                              Sep 18 '18 at 14:50
















                            2














                            In the days of wooden walled sailing ships - with no fridges or freezers - onions were a key part of the crew's staple diet. They provided vital protein and vitamins. Moreover, they would keep for a long time provided they were kept dry and in a dark space.



                            The ship's 'Purser' or 'Pusser' was responsible for storing the ship before sailing and very often he would purchase the necessary victuals from local markets. It was thus vital that the Purser could assess the quality of the food supplies that he was buying - a good Purser would 'know his onions'






                            share|improve this answer



















                            • 1





                              According to publicly available nutrition data, a medium onion contains about 4% of the average person's daily protein requirement. That means someone would have to eat 25 onions a day to get enough protein (and it's not even "complete" protein). The largest portion of RDA for vitamins for an onion is 20% for Vitamin C, so that would at least be of some benefit (and a person would only have to eat 5 onions). But onions do sprout over not too long a time, so it is questionable how long they'd last on a sea voyage.

                              – Robusto
                              Sep 18 '18 at 14:50














                            2












                            2








                            2







                            In the days of wooden walled sailing ships - with no fridges or freezers - onions were a key part of the crew's staple diet. They provided vital protein and vitamins. Moreover, they would keep for a long time provided they were kept dry and in a dark space.



                            The ship's 'Purser' or 'Pusser' was responsible for storing the ship before sailing and very often he would purchase the necessary victuals from local markets. It was thus vital that the Purser could assess the quality of the food supplies that he was buying - a good Purser would 'know his onions'






                            share|improve this answer













                            In the days of wooden walled sailing ships - with no fridges or freezers - onions were a key part of the crew's staple diet. They provided vital protein and vitamins. Moreover, they would keep for a long time provided they were kept dry and in a dark space.



                            The ship's 'Purser' or 'Pusser' was responsible for storing the ship before sailing and very often he would purchase the necessary victuals from local markets. It was thus vital that the Purser could assess the quality of the food supplies that he was buying - a good Purser would 'know his onions'







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Sep 18 '18 at 14:38









                            Jim FosterJim Foster

                            211




                            211








                            • 1





                              According to publicly available nutrition data, a medium onion contains about 4% of the average person's daily protein requirement. That means someone would have to eat 25 onions a day to get enough protein (and it's not even "complete" protein). The largest portion of RDA for vitamins for an onion is 20% for Vitamin C, so that would at least be of some benefit (and a person would only have to eat 5 onions). But onions do sprout over not too long a time, so it is questionable how long they'd last on a sea voyage.

                              – Robusto
                              Sep 18 '18 at 14:50














                            • 1





                              According to publicly available nutrition data, a medium onion contains about 4% of the average person's daily protein requirement. That means someone would have to eat 25 onions a day to get enough protein (and it's not even "complete" protein). The largest portion of RDA for vitamins for an onion is 20% for Vitamin C, so that would at least be of some benefit (and a person would only have to eat 5 onions). But onions do sprout over not too long a time, so it is questionable how long they'd last on a sea voyage.

                              – Robusto
                              Sep 18 '18 at 14:50








                            1




                            1





                            According to publicly available nutrition data, a medium onion contains about 4% of the average person's daily protein requirement. That means someone would have to eat 25 onions a day to get enough protein (and it's not even "complete" protein). The largest portion of RDA for vitamins for an onion is 20% for Vitamin C, so that would at least be of some benefit (and a person would only have to eat 5 onions). But onions do sprout over not too long a time, so it is questionable how long they'd last on a sea voyage.

                            – Robusto
                            Sep 18 '18 at 14:50





                            According to publicly available nutrition data, a medium onion contains about 4% of the average person's daily protein requirement. That means someone would have to eat 25 onions a day to get enough protein (and it's not even "complete" protein). The largest portion of RDA for vitamins for an onion is 20% for Vitamin C, so that would at least be of some benefit (and a person would only have to eat 5 onions). But onions do sprout over not too long a time, so it is questionable how long they'd last on a sea voyage.

                            – Robusto
                            Sep 18 '18 at 14:50











                            0














                            I don't know but have always been told that it is was a phrase that started among actors. C.T Onions wrote the first comprehensive glossary of Shakespeare's words. If an actor could speak his part without asking what a word meant he knew his onions. David Crystal has since compiled a more extensive glossary and if I'm working on a Shakespeare play I take it with me. I know my Onions but I don't know all my Crystal.






                            share|improve this answer
























                            • This would be an exceptional answer if you could include a source or two! :)

                              – anongoodnurse
                              Feb 8 '14 at 8:08
















                            0














                            I don't know but have always been told that it is was a phrase that started among actors. C.T Onions wrote the first comprehensive glossary of Shakespeare's words. If an actor could speak his part without asking what a word meant he knew his onions. David Crystal has since compiled a more extensive glossary and if I'm working on a Shakespeare play I take it with me. I know my Onions but I don't know all my Crystal.






                            share|improve this answer
























                            • This would be an exceptional answer if you could include a source or two! :)

                              – anongoodnurse
                              Feb 8 '14 at 8:08














                            0












                            0








                            0







                            I don't know but have always been told that it is was a phrase that started among actors. C.T Onions wrote the first comprehensive glossary of Shakespeare's words. If an actor could speak his part without asking what a word meant he knew his onions. David Crystal has since compiled a more extensive glossary and if I'm working on a Shakespeare play I take it with me. I know my Onions but I don't know all my Crystal.






                            share|improve this answer













                            I don't know but have always been told that it is was a phrase that started among actors. C.T Onions wrote the first comprehensive glossary of Shakespeare's words. If an actor could speak his part without asking what a word meant he knew his onions. David Crystal has since compiled a more extensive glossary and if I'm working on a Shakespeare play I take it with me. I know my Onions but I don't know all my Crystal.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Feb 8 '14 at 4:00









                            Adam Zlea RobinAdam Zlea Robin

                            91




                            91













                            • This would be an exceptional answer if you could include a source or two! :)

                              – anongoodnurse
                              Feb 8 '14 at 8:08



















                            • This would be an exceptional answer if you could include a source or two! :)

                              – anongoodnurse
                              Feb 8 '14 at 8:08

















                            This would be an exceptional answer if you could include a source or two! :)

                            – anongoodnurse
                            Feb 8 '14 at 8:08





                            This would be an exceptional answer if you could include a source or two! :)

                            – anongoodnurse
                            Feb 8 '14 at 8:08











                            0














                            The phrase 'to know one's onion(s)' first appeared in print at least as early as 1891. Given its historical linguistic context, the 'source' of the phrase may be construed as the independent adoption of a generalized idiomatic response to the equally idiomatic and earlier-evidenced declaration that someone 'does not know the difference between an onion and [another object, commonly another vegetable]'. Both phrases, but particularly the latter, vary freely in individual use, but are loosely formulaic.1



                            OED (paywalled) defines 'to know one's onions' as "to be experienced in or knowledgeable about something". The OED entry only mentions the plural variant "onions", attested from 1908 (note the slightly earlier appearance of the attestation shown in the compilation below, from January 1908 as compared to February):




                            1908 Postal Rec. Feb. 27/3 Never mind: Billy knows his onions. He is not troubled with corns or bunions.




                            The singular variant "onion" was, however, as far as I have discovered, the only variant in print up to 1908. The singular continued in frequent use into the 1920s, when the plural variant gradually came to dominate use. By the mid-1920s, the plural variant was used almost if not entirely exclusively.2





                            Early attestation of 'know one's onion(s)'



                            Early appearances of the phrase 'know one's onions' are a regionalism centered on and predominantly from Pennsylvania. Occasionally, instances from surrounding states (New York, Delaware, and New Jersey) appear, with only one outlier (from Washington State).



                            All links are paywalled unless otherwise noted.



                            The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 22 May 1891, Page 1:




                            Say, Garrett, don't part with Ely, if you know your onion, and we believe you do.




                            The Evening Journal (Wilmington, Delaware) 06 May 1892, Page 2:




                            I know my onion, chappies, and doncher forget it — see?




                            The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 29 Feb 1892, Page 1:




                            You don't know your onion, Stackey; you oughtn't to pull me in.




                            The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 05 Apr 1894, Page 1:




                            This trolley knows her onion and don't you forget it.




                            The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) 15 Jun 1898, Page 4:




                            You must "know your onion" to get your money on right.




                            The Evening Democrat (Warren, Pennsylvania) 27 Jun 1899, Page 4:




                            He is a big and busy bug and he knows his own onion and lights on it.




                            The Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Seattle, Washington)
                            04 Feb 1900, Page 28:




                            In cooking onions it is well to first know your onion.




                            Buffalo Courier (Buffalo, New York) 14 Apr 1900, Page 4:




                            According to the Binghamton Herald, there is one man in this State who knows 'his onion' as the tough boy says; you can't fool him.




                            The Selinsgrove Times-Tribune (Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania) 20 May 1903, Page 1:




                            The people may criticise and damn the old man, but he always knows his onion and rarely makes a mistake.




                            The New York Times (New York, New York)
                            07 Jun 1903, Page 6:




                            "He Knows His Onion."
                            To the Editor of The New York Times:

                            Apropos of the discussion of the meaning and origin of "makes no bones," will some slang etymologist let us know the origin and connection of "he knows his onion," meaning he minds his own affairs, or is posted about certain pertinent situstions?




                            Republican News Item (Laport, Pennsylvania) 25 Jun 1903, Page 1:




                            The Experimental farmer comes down strong on the butter business, and when he talks about leeks, we have nothing more to say in advice, for it is plain to see that "he knows his onion."




                            The Index (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) 26 Nov 1904, Page 7 (not paywalled):




                            Not if he knows his onion, and he thinks he does.




                            Lewisburg Journal (Lewisburg, Pennsylvania) 06 Oct 1905, Page 7:




                            I know my onion.




                            Wilkes-Barre Times (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania)
                            18 May 1907, Page 4 [blurb headline]:




                            Knows His Onion




                            The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 26 Oct 1907, Page 11:




                            It isn't wise for a policeman to say "I never saw the beat." He knows his "onion!" If he made such a remark, in all probability he would not "turn-up" again. He'd get it in the Adam's "apple." That's all!




                            The Wilkes-Barre Record (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania)
                            02 Jan 1908, Page 4:




                            But never mind, Billy knows his onions,

                            He is not troubled with corns or bunions,

                            He travels along at a good fair gait;

                            Unless the roads are bad, he is never late.

                              O.S. White, (Letter Carrier No. 9),

                              48 Carey Avenue, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.






                            Early attestation of 'does not know an onion from a ——'



                            The Scottsboro Citizen (Scottsboro, Alabama) 01 Feb 1883, Page 2:




                            The Chattanooga Democrat intimates that a man who doesn't know an onion from a grindstone ought not to have been appointed commissioner of agriculture of Tennessee.




                            Ellsworth Messenger (Ellsworth, Kansas) 15 Apr 1885, Page 1:




                            If he should take his garden down to his Great Steam Printing Shop, he had better take Jimmy Jarvis along to weed it, for he himself would not know an onion from a bull nettle.




                            The Gazette (Montreal, Canada) 22 Jun 1888, Page 8:




                            He did not know an onion from a cabbage.




                            Woodland Daily Democrat (Woodland, California)
                            22 Jul 1890, Page 3:




                            Thad Spaulding and family are there also, and Thad wouldn't know an onion from a potato to-day.




                            Northumberland County Democrat (Sunbury, Pennsylvania) 19 Sep 1890, Page 2:




                            Now that fairs are opening we raise to remark that the horse jockey, who does not know an onion from a turnip, generally gets away with more than his share of the boodle.




                            The Brooklyn Daily Eagle (Brooklyn, New York) 29 Oct 1899, Page 25:




                            She didn't know onions from lamp wicks and bunions;

                            A clam from a lobster, or crab from an eel!






                            1. For purposes of definition, the formula underlying the former phrase is "know(s) one's X", and the formula of the latter phrase is "do(es) not know the difference between X and Y".
                            2. I do not know why the plural variant came to be preferred to the exclusion of the singular. As a matter of speculation, I observe that I am slightly more uncomfortable with the ill-defined referent of the metaphorical "onion" than I am with the equally ill-defined referents of the metaphorical "onions". My mild discomfort may be due to what I consider the stronger likelihood of inappropriate interpretations of "onion" than of "onions".





                            share




























                              0














                              The phrase 'to know one's onion(s)' first appeared in print at least as early as 1891. Given its historical linguistic context, the 'source' of the phrase may be construed as the independent adoption of a generalized idiomatic response to the equally idiomatic and earlier-evidenced declaration that someone 'does not know the difference between an onion and [another object, commonly another vegetable]'. Both phrases, but particularly the latter, vary freely in individual use, but are loosely formulaic.1



                              OED (paywalled) defines 'to know one's onions' as "to be experienced in or knowledgeable about something". The OED entry only mentions the plural variant "onions", attested from 1908 (note the slightly earlier appearance of the attestation shown in the compilation below, from January 1908 as compared to February):




                              1908 Postal Rec. Feb. 27/3 Never mind: Billy knows his onions. He is not troubled with corns or bunions.




                              The singular variant "onion" was, however, as far as I have discovered, the only variant in print up to 1908. The singular continued in frequent use into the 1920s, when the plural variant gradually came to dominate use. By the mid-1920s, the plural variant was used almost if not entirely exclusively.2





                              Early attestation of 'know one's onion(s)'



                              Early appearances of the phrase 'know one's onions' are a regionalism centered on and predominantly from Pennsylvania. Occasionally, instances from surrounding states (New York, Delaware, and New Jersey) appear, with only one outlier (from Washington State).



                              All links are paywalled unless otherwise noted.



                              The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 22 May 1891, Page 1:




                              Say, Garrett, don't part with Ely, if you know your onion, and we believe you do.




                              The Evening Journal (Wilmington, Delaware) 06 May 1892, Page 2:




                              I know my onion, chappies, and doncher forget it — see?




                              The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 29 Feb 1892, Page 1:




                              You don't know your onion, Stackey; you oughtn't to pull me in.




                              The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 05 Apr 1894, Page 1:




                              This trolley knows her onion and don't you forget it.




                              The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) 15 Jun 1898, Page 4:




                              You must "know your onion" to get your money on right.




                              The Evening Democrat (Warren, Pennsylvania) 27 Jun 1899, Page 4:




                              He is a big and busy bug and he knows his own onion and lights on it.




                              The Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Seattle, Washington)
                              04 Feb 1900, Page 28:




                              In cooking onions it is well to first know your onion.




                              Buffalo Courier (Buffalo, New York) 14 Apr 1900, Page 4:




                              According to the Binghamton Herald, there is one man in this State who knows 'his onion' as the tough boy says; you can't fool him.




                              The Selinsgrove Times-Tribune (Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania) 20 May 1903, Page 1:




                              The people may criticise and damn the old man, but he always knows his onion and rarely makes a mistake.




                              The New York Times (New York, New York)
                              07 Jun 1903, Page 6:




                              "He Knows His Onion."
                              To the Editor of The New York Times:

                              Apropos of the discussion of the meaning and origin of "makes no bones," will some slang etymologist let us know the origin and connection of "he knows his onion," meaning he minds his own affairs, or is posted about certain pertinent situstions?




                              Republican News Item (Laport, Pennsylvania) 25 Jun 1903, Page 1:




                              The Experimental farmer comes down strong on the butter business, and when he talks about leeks, we have nothing more to say in advice, for it is plain to see that "he knows his onion."




                              The Index (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) 26 Nov 1904, Page 7 (not paywalled):




                              Not if he knows his onion, and he thinks he does.




                              Lewisburg Journal (Lewisburg, Pennsylvania) 06 Oct 1905, Page 7:




                              I know my onion.




                              Wilkes-Barre Times (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania)
                              18 May 1907, Page 4 [blurb headline]:




                              Knows His Onion




                              The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 26 Oct 1907, Page 11:




                              It isn't wise for a policeman to say "I never saw the beat." He knows his "onion!" If he made such a remark, in all probability he would not "turn-up" again. He'd get it in the Adam's "apple." That's all!




                              The Wilkes-Barre Record (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania)
                              02 Jan 1908, Page 4:




                              But never mind, Billy knows his onions,

                              He is not troubled with corns or bunions,

                              He travels along at a good fair gait;

                              Unless the roads are bad, he is never late.

                                O.S. White, (Letter Carrier No. 9),

                                48 Carey Avenue, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.






                              Early attestation of 'does not know an onion from a ——'



                              The Scottsboro Citizen (Scottsboro, Alabama) 01 Feb 1883, Page 2:




                              The Chattanooga Democrat intimates that a man who doesn't know an onion from a grindstone ought not to have been appointed commissioner of agriculture of Tennessee.




                              Ellsworth Messenger (Ellsworth, Kansas) 15 Apr 1885, Page 1:




                              If he should take his garden down to his Great Steam Printing Shop, he had better take Jimmy Jarvis along to weed it, for he himself would not know an onion from a bull nettle.




                              The Gazette (Montreal, Canada) 22 Jun 1888, Page 8:




                              He did not know an onion from a cabbage.




                              Woodland Daily Democrat (Woodland, California)
                              22 Jul 1890, Page 3:




                              Thad Spaulding and family are there also, and Thad wouldn't know an onion from a potato to-day.




                              Northumberland County Democrat (Sunbury, Pennsylvania) 19 Sep 1890, Page 2:




                              Now that fairs are opening we raise to remark that the horse jockey, who does not know an onion from a turnip, generally gets away with more than his share of the boodle.




                              The Brooklyn Daily Eagle (Brooklyn, New York) 29 Oct 1899, Page 25:




                              She didn't know onions from lamp wicks and bunions;

                              A clam from a lobster, or crab from an eel!






                              1. For purposes of definition, the formula underlying the former phrase is "know(s) one's X", and the formula of the latter phrase is "do(es) not know the difference between X and Y".
                              2. I do not know why the plural variant came to be preferred to the exclusion of the singular. As a matter of speculation, I observe that I am slightly more uncomfortable with the ill-defined referent of the metaphorical "onion" than I am with the equally ill-defined referents of the metaphorical "onions". My mild discomfort may be due to what I consider the stronger likelihood of inappropriate interpretations of "onion" than of "onions".





                              share


























                                0












                                0








                                0







                                The phrase 'to know one's onion(s)' first appeared in print at least as early as 1891. Given its historical linguistic context, the 'source' of the phrase may be construed as the independent adoption of a generalized idiomatic response to the equally idiomatic and earlier-evidenced declaration that someone 'does not know the difference between an onion and [another object, commonly another vegetable]'. Both phrases, but particularly the latter, vary freely in individual use, but are loosely formulaic.1



                                OED (paywalled) defines 'to know one's onions' as "to be experienced in or knowledgeable about something". The OED entry only mentions the plural variant "onions", attested from 1908 (note the slightly earlier appearance of the attestation shown in the compilation below, from January 1908 as compared to February):




                                1908 Postal Rec. Feb. 27/3 Never mind: Billy knows his onions. He is not troubled with corns or bunions.




                                The singular variant "onion" was, however, as far as I have discovered, the only variant in print up to 1908. The singular continued in frequent use into the 1920s, when the plural variant gradually came to dominate use. By the mid-1920s, the plural variant was used almost if not entirely exclusively.2





                                Early attestation of 'know one's onion(s)'



                                Early appearances of the phrase 'know one's onions' are a regionalism centered on and predominantly from Pennsylvania. Occasionally, instances from surrounding states (New York, Delaware, and New Jersey) appear, with only one outlier (from Washington State).



                                All links are paywalled unless otherwise noted.



                                The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 22 May 1891, Page 1:




                                Say, Garrett, don't part with Ely, if you know your onion, and we believe you do.




                                The Evening Journal (Wilmington, Delaware) 06 May 1892, Page 2:




                                I know my onion, chappies, and doncher forget it — see?




                                The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 29 Feb 1892, Page 1:




                                You don't know your onion, Stackey; you oughtn't to pull me in.




                                The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 05 Apr 1894, Page 1:




                                This trolley knows her onion and don't you forget it.




                                The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) 15 Jun 1898, Page 4:




                                You must "know your onion" to get your money on right.




                                The Evening Democrat (Warren, Pennsylvania) 27 Jun 1899, Page 4:




                                He is a big and busy bug and he knows his own onion and lights on it.




                                The Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Seattle, Washington)
                                04 Feb 1900, Page 28:




                                In cooking onions it is well to first know your onion.




                                Buffalo Courier (Buffalo, New York) 14 Apr 1900, Page 4:




                                According to the Binghamton Herald, there is one man in this State who knows 'his onion' as the tough boy says; you can't fool him.




                                The Selinsgrove Times-Tribune (Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania) 20 May 1903, Page 1:




                                The people may criticise and damn the old man, but he always knows his onion and rarely makes a mistake.




                                The New York Times (New York, New York)
                                07 Jun 1903, Page 6:




                                "He Knows His Onion."
                                To the Editor of The New York Times:

                                Apropos of the discussion of the meaning and origin of "makes no bones," will some slang etymologist let us know the origin and connection of "he knows his onion," meaning he minds his own affairs, or is posted about certain pertinent situstions?




                                Republican News Item (Laport, Pennsylvania) 25 Jun 1903, Page 1:




                                The Experimental farmer comes down strong on the butter business, and when he talks about leeks, we have nothing more to say in advice, for it is plain to see that "he knows his onion."




                                The Index (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) 26 Nov 1904, Page 7 (not paywalled):




                                Not if he knows his onion, and he thinks he does.




                                Lewisburg Journal (Lewisburg, Pennsylvania) 06 Oct 1905, Page 7:




                                I know my onion.




                                Wilkes-Barre Times (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania)
                                18 May 1907, Page 4 [blurb headline]:




                                Knows His Onion




                                The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 26 Oct 1907, Page 11:




                                It isn't wise for a policeman to say "I never saw the beat." He knows his "onion!" If he made such a remark, in all probability he would not "turn-up" again. He'd get it in the Adam's "apple." That's all!




                                The Wilkes-Barre Record (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania)
                                02 Jan 1908, Page 4:




                                But never mind, Billy knows his onions,

                                He is not troubled with corns or bunions,

                                He travels along at a good fair gait;

                                Unless the roads are bad, he is never late.

                                  O.S. White, (Letter Carrier No. 9),

                                  48 Carey Avenue, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.






                                Early attestation of 'does not know an onion from a ——'



                                The Scottsboro Citizen (Scottsboro, Alabama) 01 Feb 1883, Page 2:




                                The Chattanooga Democrat intimates that a man who doesn't know an onion from a grindstone ought not to have been appointed commissioner of agriculture of Tennessee.




                                Ellsworth Messenger (Ellsworth, Kansas) 15 Apr 1885, Page 1:




                                If he should take his garden down to his Great Steam Printing Shop, he had better take Jimmy Jarvis along to weed it, for he himself would not know an onion from a bull nettle.




                                The Gazette (Montreal, Canada) 22 Jun 1888, Page 8:




                                He did not know an onion from a cabbage.




                                Woodland Daily Democrat (Woodland, California)
                                22 Jul 1890, Page 3:




                                Thad Spaulding and family are there also, and Thad wouldn't know an onion from a potato to-day.




                                Northumberland County Democrat (Sunbury, Pennsylvania) 19 Sep 1890, Page 2:




                                Now that fairs are opening we raise to remark that the horse jockey, who does not know an onion from a turnip, generally gets away with more than his share of the boodle.




                                The Brooklyn Daily Eagle (Brooklyn, New York) 29 Oct 1899, Page 25:




                                She didn't know onions from lamp wicks and bunions;

                                A clam from a lobster, or crab from an eel!






                                1. For purposes of definition, the formula underlying the former phrase is "know(s) one's X", and the formula of the latter phrase is "do(es) not know the difference between X and Y".
                                2. I do not know why the plural variant came to be preferred to the exclusion of the singular. As a matter of speculation, I observe that I am slightly more uncomfortable with the ill-defined referent of the metaphorical "onion" than I am with the equally ill-defined referents of the metaphorical "onions". My mild discomfort may be due to what I consider the stronger likelihood of inappropriate interpretations of "onion" than of "onions".





                                share













                                The phrase 'to know one's onion(s)' first appeared in print at least as early as 1891. Given its historical linguistic context, the 'source' of the phrase may be construed as the independent adoption of a generalized idiomatic response to the equally idiomatic and earlier-evidenced declaration that someone 'does not know the difference between an onion and [another object, commonly another vegetable]'. Both phrases, but particularly the latter, vary freely in individual use, but are loosely formulaic.1



                                OED (paywalled) defines 'to know one's onions' as "to be experienced in or knowledgeable about something". The OED entry only mentions the plural variant "onions", attested from 1908 (note the slightly earlier appearance of the attestation shown in the compilation below, from January 1908 as compared to February):




                                1908 Postal Rec. Feb. 27/3 Never mind: Billy knows his onions. He is not troubled with corns or bunions.




                                The singular variant "onion" was, however, as far as I have discovered, the only variant in print up to 1908. The singular continued in frequent use into the 1920s, when the plural variant gradually came to dominate use. By the mid-1920s, the plural variant was used almost if not entirely exclusively.2





                                Early attestation of 'know one's onion(s)'



                                Early appearances of the phrase 'know one's onions' are a regionalism centered on and predominantly from Pennsylvania. Occasionally, instances from surrounding states (New York, Delaware, and New Jersey) appear, with only one outlier (from Washington State).



                                All links are paywalled unless otherwise noted.



                                The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 22 May 1891, Page 1:




                                Say, Garrett, don't part with Ely, if you know your onion, and we believe you do.




                                The Evening Journal (Wilmington, Delaware) 06 May 1892, Page 2:




                                I know my onion, chappies, and doncher forget it — see?




                                The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 29 Feb 1892, Page 1:




                                You don't know your onion, Stackey; you oughtn't to pull me in.




                                The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 05 Apr 1894, Page 1:




                                This trolley knows her onion and don't you forget it.




                                The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) 15 Jun 1898, Page 4:




                                You must "know your onion" to get your money on right.




                                The Evening Democrat (Warren, Pennsylvania) 27 Jun 1899, Page 4:




                                He is a big and busy bug and he knows his own onion and lights on it.




                                The Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Seattle, Washington)
                                04 Feb 1900, Page 28:




                                In cooking onions it is well to first know your onion.




                                Buffalo Courier (Buffalo, New York) 14 Apr 1900, Page 4:




                                According to the Binghamton Herald, there is one man in this State who knows 'his onion' as the tough boy says; you can't fool him.




                                The Selinsgrove Times-Tribune (Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania) 20 May 1903, Page 1:




                                The people may criticise and damn the old man, but he always knows his onion and rarely makes a mistake.




                                The New York Times (New York, New York)
                                07 Jun 1903, Page 6:




                                "He Knows His Onion."
                                To the Editor of The New York Times:

                                Apropos of the discussion of the meaning and origin of "makes no bones," will some slang etymologist let us know the origin and connection of "he knows his onion," meaning he minds his own affairs, or is posted about certain pertinent situstions?




                                Republican News Item (Laport, Pennsylvania) 25 Jun 1903, Page 1:




                                The Experimental farmer comes down strong on the butter business, and when he talks about leeks, we have nothing more to say in advice, for it is plain to see that "he knows his onion."




                                The Index (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) 26 Nov 1904, Page 7 (not paywalled):




                                Not if he knows his onion, and he thinks he does.




                                Lewisburg Journal (Lewisburg, Pennsylvania) 06 Oct 1905, Page 7:




                                I know my onion.




                                Wilkes-Barre Times (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania)
                                18 May 1907, Page 4 [blurb headline]:




                                Knows His Onion




                                The Morning Post (Camden, New Jersey) 26 Oct 1907, Page 11:




                                It isn't wise for a policeman to say "I never saw the beat." He knows his "onion!" If he made such a remark, in all probability he would not "turn-up" again. He'd get it in the Adam's "apple." That's all!




                                The Wilkes-Barre Record (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania)
                                02 Jan 1908, Page 4:




                                But never mind, Billy knows his onions,

                                He is not troubled with corns or bunions,

                                He travels along at a good fair gait;

                                Unless the roads are bad, he is never late.

                                  O.S. White, (Letter Carrier No. 9),

                                  48 Carey Avenue, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.






                                Early attestation of 'does not know an onion from a ——'



                                The Scottsboro Citizen (Scottsboro, Alabama) 01 Feb 1883, Page 2:




                                The Chattanooga Democrat intimates that a man who doesn't know an onion from a grindstone ought not to have been appointed commissioner of agriculture of Tennessee.




                                Ellsworth Messenger (Ellsworth, Kansas) 15 Apr 1885, Page 1:




                                If he should take his garden down to his Great Steam Printing Shop, he had better take Jimmy Jarvis along to weed it, for he himself would not know an onion from a bull nettle.




                                The Gazette (Montreal, Canada) 22 Jun 1888, Page 8:




                                He did not know an onion from a cabbage.




                                Woodland Daily Democrat (Woodland, California)
                                22 Jul 1890, Page 3:




                                Thad Spaulding and family are there also, and Thad wouldn't know an onion from a potato to-day.




                                Northumberland County Democrat (Sunbury, Pennsylvania) 19 Sep 1890, Page 2:




                                Now that fairs are opening we raise to remark that the horse jockey, who does not know an onion from a turnip, generally gets away with more than his share of the boodle.




                                The Brooklyn Daily Eagle (Brooklyn, New York) 29 Oct 1899, Page 25:




                                She didn't know onions from lamp wicks and bunions;

                                A clam from a lobster, or crab from an eel!






                                1. For purposes of definition, the formula underlying the former phrase is "know(s) one's X", and the formula of the latter phrase is "do(es) not know the difference between X and Y".
                                2. I do not know why the plural variant came to be preferred to the exclusion of the singular. As a matter of speculation, I observe that I am slightly more uncomfortable with the ill-defined referent of the metaphorical "onion" than I am with the equally ill-defined referents of the metaphorical "onions". My mild discomfort may be due to what I consider the stronger likelihood of inappropriate interpretations of "onion" than of "onions".






                                share











                                share


                                share










                                answered 9 mins ago









                                JELJEL

                                27.2k45191




                                27.2k45191























                                    -1














                                    Vince Kosuga captured the onion futures market in 1955-56 and enjoyed a monopoly of that culinary necessity. He knew his onions.






                                    share|improve this answer




























                                      -1














                                      Vince Kosuga captured the onion futures market in 1955-56 and enjoyed a monopoly of that culinary necessity. He knew his onions.






                                      share|improve this answer


























                                        -1












                                        -1








                                        -1







                                        Vince Kosuga captured the onion futures market in 1955-56 and enjoyed a monopoly of that culinary necessity. He knew his onions.






                                        share|improve this answer













                                        Vince Kosuga captured the onion futures market in 1955-56 and enjoyed a monopoly of that culinary necessity. He knew his onions.







                                        share|improve this answer












                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer










                                        answered Nov 25 '15 at 18:28









                                        Crescente VillahermosaCrescente Villahermosa

                                        1




                                        1























                                            -2














                                            An old small time grocery store owner named Tommy Campbell in McGraw, NY used to tell all of us kids that bought candy from the store that we knew our onions. This was approximately 1965. I remember asking my father what the expression meant. He told me that he was probably short changing us. For example giving him a nickel for 4 cents worth of candy and being told you know your onions instead of getting the penny change back. While in college in the early 1980's I bought a copy of " The Dictionary of American Slang ". I no longer have possession of the book yet my memory recalls what my father had told me.Making you feel good about the transaction yet actually having "the wool pulled over your eyes".






                                            share|improve this answer




























                                              -2














                                              An old small time grocery store owner named Tommy Campbell in McGraw, NY used to tell all of us kids that bought candy from the store that we knew our onions. This was approximately 1965. I remember asking my father what the expression meant. He told me that he was probably short changing us. For example giving him a nickel for 4 cents worth of candy and being told you know your onions instead of getting the penny change back. While in college in the early 1980's I bought a copy of " The Dictionary of American Slang ". I no longer have possession of the book yet my memory recalls what my father had told me.Making you feel good about the transaction yet actually having "the wool pulled over your eyes".






                                              share|improve this answer


























                                                -2












                                                -2








                                                -2







                                                An old small time grocery store owner named Tommy Campbell in McGraw, NY used to tell all of us kids that bought candy from the store that we knew our onions. This was approximately 1965. I remember asking my father what the expression meant. He told me that he was probably short changing us. For example giving him a nickel for 4 cents worth of candy and being told you know your onions instead of getting the penny change back. While in college in the early 1980's I bought a copy of " The Dictionary of American Slang ". I no longer have possession of the book yet my memory recalls what my father had told me.Making you feel good about the transaction yet actually having "the wool pulled over your eyes".






                                                share|improve this answer













                                                An old small time grocery store owner named Tommy Campbell in McGraw, NY used to tell all of us kids that bought candy from the store that we knew our onions. This was approximately 1965. I remember asking my father what the expression meant. He told me that he was probably short changing us. For example giving him a nickel for 4 cents worth of candy and being told you know your onions instead of getting the penny change back. While in college in the early 1980's I bought a copy of " The Dictionary of American Slang ". I no longer have possession of the book yet my memory recalls what my father had told me.Making you feel good about the transaction yet actually having "the wool pulled over your eyes".







                                                share|improve this answer












                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer










                                                answered Jul 8 '14 at 22:03









                                                Thane BilodeauThane Bilodeau

                                                1




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