carry corn
English
editVerb
editcarry corn (third-person singular simple present carries corn, present participle carrying corn, simple past and past participle carried corn)
- (colloquial, dated) To (be able to) handle success or prosperity in an equable manner.
- 2003, Richard Hoggart, Everyday Language and Everyday Life, page 95:
- 'A bad workman blames his tools' is widely taken as an accepted classic truth […] Perhaps French also contains its exasperated partner: 'If you want a thing done well, do it yourself'. One of my relatives had a favourite image for men who failed such tests: 'He can't carry corn'. He wasn't literally expected to, either, not in those parts, but the image fitted well enough. In fact, it seemed to carry a great charge of rejection.
- 2019, Charles John Cutcliffe Wright Hyne, Kate Meredith, Financier:
- That man can't carry corn. He evidently gets a heap too loose tongue if you offer him just a little civility.
References
edit- John Camden Hotten (1873) The Slang Dictionary
- William Carr (1828) “Can't carry corn; this expression is applied to one who is too much elated by prosperity.”, in The Dialect of Craven: In the West-Riding of the County of York, page 86