Meaning:
To be in luck; in a prosperous happy state.
Background:
If ever a phrase were unequivocally Irish, it is this one. `On the pig's
back' is a literal translation of the Irish `ar mhuin na muice', which is
used colloquially to mean `well off'; `in luck'. For example, this piece
from the New Zealand newspaper The West Coast Times. August, 1890:
If one third of the yarns about the size and quantity of the mica deposit
in the district have any foundation in fact the Greymouth syndicates are on
the pig's back.
The notion of riding on a pig's back leads inevitably to `piggyback`. This
term, in its original form at least, pre-dates `on the pig's back' and also
the apparently related phrase `high on the hog` - and all these expressions
have some association with enjoyment. Nevertheless, I can find no connection
between them. Many English expressions and proverbs relate to pigs, no doubt
because, as a race, the English have had much close contact with them over
the centuries. The similarity of these three phrases appears to be no more
than coincidental.
- www.phrases.org.uk [edited]
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It must not be easy getting off the pig, especially when the going is well. As
one software programmer put it: "We all came to make F-you money. But after we
made it, nobody said F-you anymore." However, my former boss, Tom, did that.
Tom graduated Stanford and worked in an appliance shop and stayed as a mid-level
manager in the same group after they were bought. When I joined, they were
acquired again by an SF company.
He had a sharp mind, easy manner, and soft voice and always enjoyed a small joke
or a colorful phrase. My first Christmas with them, he gave everyone a personal
gift, and I got three 4-oz mason jars of jam in a bag, apricot, orange, and
strawberry, made by his wife. It turned out to be a tradition as the next year
he gave me more and I gave him two cans of kimchi.
Then came the re-org. Our unit was made redundant, and engineers were
offered positions in other projects within the firm but most took a package and
moved on. Tom, in his early 50s, retired. He must have done well but still, few
would stop when on the pig's back.
Since then, he organized get-togethers of his former collegues, twice a year. I
didn't show up last year but will make the coming one. It's been 11 years since
we met. It'll be good to see him again.
Meaning:
To be in luck; in a prosperous happy state.
Background:
If ever a phrase were unequivocally Irish, it is this one. `On the pig's
back' is a literal translation of the Irish `ar mhuin na muice', which is
used colloquially to mean `well off'; `in luck'. For example, this piece
from the New Zealand newspaper The West Coast Times. August, 1890:
If one third of the yarns about the size and quantity of the mica deposit
in the district have any foundation in fact the Greymouth syndicates are on
the pig's back.
The notion of riding on a pig's back leads inevitably to `piggyback`. This
term, in its original form at least, pre-dates `on the pig's back' and also
the apparently related phrase `high on the hog` - and all these expressions
have some association with enjoyment. Nevertheless, I can find no connection
between them. Many English expressions and proverbs relate to pigs, no doubt
because, as a race, the English have had much close contact with them over
the centuries. The similarity of these three phrases appears to be no more
than coincidental.
- www.phrases.org.uk [edited]
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
It must not be easy getting off the pig, especially when the going is well. As
one software programmer put it: "We all came to make F-you money. But after we
made it, nobody said F-you anymore." However, my former boss, Tom, did that.
Tom graduated Stanford and worked in an appliance shop and stayed as a mid-level
manager in the same group after they were bought. When I joined, they were
acquired again by an SF company.
He had a sharp mind, easy manner, and soft voice and always enjoyed a small joke
or a colorful phrase. My first Christmas with them, he gave everyone a personal
gift, and I got three 4-oz mason jars of jam in a bag, apricot, orange, and
strawberry, made by his wife. It turned out to be a tradition as the next year
he gave me more and I gave him two cans of kimchi.
Then came the re-org. Our unit was made redundant, and engineers were
offered positions in other projects within the firm but most took a package and
moved on. Tom, in his early 50s, retired. He must have done well but still, few
would stop when on the pig's back.
Since then, he organized get-togethers of his former collegues, twice a year. I
didn't show up last year but will make the coming one. It's been 11 years since
we met. It'll be good to see him again.