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Hello and welcome back to the slang podcast with me your host, Louisa May Adams. This show will give you the chance to hear, understand the origins and meanings of new slang and to use them immediately. So let's get started. One of my friends is a musician and he's performing at his first concert tomorrow. This morning I saw him for a coffee and said, "I heard you're performing at a concert tomorrow. Break a leg."
Looking at me with confusion and fear he repeated, "Break a leg. Why on earth would I want to do that?" You may be as confused as he was, so let's explore this slang phrase. To clarify, I'm not wishing him bad luck, the opposite actually. This idiom, to break a leg, has in fact positive connotations, strange as it seems. So where does this strange idiom come from and when do we use it?
Now there are many claimed reasons for the existence of this phrase, usually involving connotations with the theatre. Break a leg, earliest written evidence can be found in Bernard Subell's 1948 theatre handbook in which Subell explains that actors never said good luck. Only I hope you break a leg. It's been suggested that wishing someone to break a leg dates back as far as Ancient Greek theatre.
After watching Ancient Greeks plays, audiences would stomp their feet to express their praise for the play rather like how we clap and applaud today. By wishing an actor to break a leg, they hoped that the show would be such a hit that a member of the audience would stomp so hard that they literally may break their own leg, showing that the play was a total success. However, this is only one theory. Our second stems from Ancient superstition, that when you want something to be a success,
you must wish for the opposite. For an actor on opening night, it could be argued that the worst thing to happen would be to break a leg, so wishing for it may in fact ensure it is avoided. Nowadays we can use this term not just concerning luck in the theatre, but in general. For example, I hope you break a leg at your job interview today, or break a leg on the English test. So when do you next need to break a leg? A job interview? An English exam? Let us know!
That's the end of our episode, so remember to tune in for our next episode to see what new slang we have in store for you. You can find us on our website, theslangpodcast.com And from there you can see our transcript and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and many more apps. Or head over to our Facebook page or Instagram for the slang podcast for updates and more slang. [Music]