begin with the chucky
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From a story in which a frugal mother recalls how she used to eat cheap foods such as porridge before becoming wealthy enough to afford chucky (“chicken”).
Verb
[edit]begin with the chucky (third-person singular simple present begins with the chucky, present participle beginning with the chucky, simple past began with the chucky, past participle begun with the chucky)
- (obsolete) To live beyond one's means.
- 1865, English Women's Domestic Magazine, page 89:
- Half the world now begins with the 'chucky'.
- 1871, Young people, The Juvenile instructor and companion, page 220:
- Recollect and apply the general principle involved in the lament over "Andrew's imprudence," and don't "begin with the chucky"!
- 1891, The Quiver:
- Our son Andrew has now got a shop and a wife too. He is trying his hand both at business and at housekeeping : but. oh, sir ! he has made an awfu' mistake : he has begun with the chucky !