<[ Now I'm curious what the big Oxford Dictionary of the English
<[ Language says about 'blackleg' !
Okay, Robbie, my copy of the Oxford dictionary defines 'Blackleg, -legs'
as:
1. A disease in cattle and sheep which affects the legs (better
black-legs),
2. A turf swindler or swindler in gambling (origin lost),
3. A local name of opprobrium for a workman willing to work for a
master whose men are on strike (also called black-neb),
4. sc. a matchmaker (rare)
Sounds remarkably like the definition you posted of 'Jackleg' from your
friend's old dictionary.
So could it be that 'Black-leg' has been Americanized to 'Jack-leg'
(having no relation to the Oxford 'Jackleg'...the knife) to describe
strike-breaking workmen who, being not as good as the striking workers,
produced inferior results?
Or is it borrowing from the swindler definition: one who passes off a
so-called finished product that has been quickly and cheaply repaired
(such that the repairs will not last or that look awful). Either would
fit the term's use at Piano-tuning school. Neither describes a dog
with the weak bladder :-))
Well, you're the Editor, so you get the last word (please!).
Musically yours,
Bill Wineburgh
http://members.aol.com/WWineburgh/musicbox.html
[ It could be...! ;-) -- Robbie
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