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Talk:gentleman and scholar

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Latest comment: 5 years ago by DCDuring in topic N-Grams of forms

Can we get some older citations?

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While the citation from 2007 shows the meaning of the phrase, it doesn't show the history. A small amount of web searching turns up a lot of people asking where it comes from, usually under the impression that it's from the twentieth century or later (e.g., one prominent question on Yahoo answers asks, "What movie does this come from?"). In fact, it's much older. Just for example, a little more digging shows that phrases.org.uk has a citation from Bartlett's quoting a Robert Burns poem from the eighteenth century. It would be kind of nice to get a couple of older citations listed here.

RFM discussion: July 2010

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The following discussion has been moved from Wiktionary:Requests for moves, mergers and splits (permalink).

This discussion is no longer live and is left here as an archive. Please do not modify this conversation, but feel free to discuss its conclusions.


Move to gentleman and scholar, retaining this as redirect. Plural seems to get 8000 bgc hits, vs 18000 for singular, not warranting keeping the "a". DCDuring TALK 18:30, 18 July 2010 (UTC)Reply

N-Grams of forms

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These results cast doubt on the wisdom of the earlier move. DCDuring (talk) 04:05, 25 November 2019 (UTC)Reply