Bum steer

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File:ANMM-Bounty-6.jpg
Bounty (1978 ship) showing the stern and rudder of a typical sailing vessel of the 19th century
File:Bounty II steering wheel.JPG
Bounty (1960 ship) showing steering wheel and its location relative to the stern on a vessel of the 19th century

To give a bum steer is a predominantly Australian and New Zealand idiom that means to provide information, intentionally or unintentionally,[1] that is incorrect,[2] was unhelpful, or caused one to be led astray. The phrase is not generally regarded as pejorative. The idiom, as used in Australia and New Zealand, reached the United States in the 1920s[3] probably after exposure to Australian troops on the Western Front during World War I, and is recorded in the UK since 1944.[4]

Its origin is possibly from 19th century American maritime humour and the difficulty of trying to steer a vessel in reverse.[5] A ship's stern is flat and lacks the pointed structure of a bow, and a ship is therefore difficult to maneuver in reverse when using the rudder, also found on the stern.[6] The reverse maneuvering was accomplished therefore through shouted instructions from the wharf to the wheelhouse, via intermediary deckhands. Such communication was prone to misunderstanding owing to the wide variety of nationalities employed on United States merchant vessels during the 19th century.

Originally, the "steer" in the idiom is not related to the male cattle also called steers.[7]

Citations and notes

  1. p.468, Urdang
  2. for example, p.137, Kitching
  3. p.125, Barnhart, Steinmetz
  4. p.32, Fergusson, Partridge, Beale
  5. p.1619, The Chambers Dictionary
  6. p.73, Day
  7. p.49, Smith

References

  • Smith, Chrysti M., Verbivore's Feast: A Banquet of Word & Phrase Origins, Farcountry Press, 2003
  • Kirkpatrick, E. M., Schwarz, C. M., The Wordsworth Dictionary of Idioms, Wordsworth Editions, 1993
  • Fergusson, Rosalind, Partridge, Eric, Beale, Paul, Shorter Slang Dictionary: From the Work of Eric Partridge and Paul Beale, Routledge, 1994
  • Kitching, G. N., Wittgenstein and Society: Essays in Conceptual Puzzlement, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2003
  • Urdang, Laurence, The Oxford Thesaurus: An A-Z Dictionary of Synonyms, Clarendon Press, 1991
  • Barnhart, Robert K., Steinmetz, Sol, The Barnhart Dictionary of Etymology, H.W. Wilson Co., 1988
  • Day, Thomas Fleming, Rudder, Fawcett Publications, 1958
  • The Chambers Dictionary, Edinburgh, Allied Publishers, 2007