English Language & Usage Asked on September 26, 2021
To thrash someone within an inch of his life is sometimes referred to has beating seven bells out of him. But why should seven be the number chosen? This source here acknowledges the phrase exists but is silent as to the etymology, and here the phrase appears as kick seven bells… and alternatively ten bells, which I have never come across.
I’ve heard it suggested that the term derives from seven bells, the nautical expression for half-an-hour before the end of the watch (so one would beat someone within a small space of the end of his life). But how do we reconcile that with the alternative beat seven shades (of shit) out of?
It was answered on Ask.Metafilter:
Like danb indicates, it's nautical slang. A four hour watch consists of eight half hour bells - seven bells is almost all the way.
The OED: "In Naut. slang phrs. to knock seven bells out of (someone): to beat (someone) severely; similarly, to scare seven bells out of: to terrify."
Edit: the earliest reference I found is Na motu: or, Reef-rovings in the South seas by Edward T. Perkins in 1854:
"I suppose there were a hundred look-outs between the night-heads, does that give you any right to disobey orders? My orders are, that no man shall sleep on watch. I'da mind, when I first began, to make an example of you ; but bear it in mind, that if I ever catch you at it again, I'll knock seven bells out of you ! Go ' long ; I've done with you."
There are a lot nautical references from the 19th century. Wikipedia has a good article on the eight ship's bells.
Edit 2: The Royal Navy's guide to Navy slang says:
To Knock Seven Bells out of a Man
An old naval expression for the giving of a sound thrashing (the nautical equivalent of "Knocking a man for six" [a cricketing term]); presumably to knock all eight bells out of a man would be to kill him!
Edit 3: "seven shades of" is much more recent. Here are some of the earliest references I found:
Correct answer by Hugo on September 26, 2021
This saying was, as noted, Nautical slang, and would be quite archaic. In times past, seven was viewed as a lucky number, and everything was given seven(nearly) We had seven colours in the rainbow last time, forgive someone seventy times seven, seven deadly sins, ,etc.
We probably all know:
Seven wonders of the Ancient World
It was actually a religious number, and as people were religious last time, they just used seven frequently.
In fact, we see the popularity of seven in other religions, i.e. Islam, which teaches seven heavens and seven articles of faith, Hinduism, with the seven chakras, in Japan even, there are seven gods, seven bushidos, 777 in toilets!!.
Seven appears everywhere: Seven Hills of Rome, Seven Liberal Arts, Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove(China), etc.
Answered by Thursagen on September 26, 2021
Seven is just a magical number, and so has been used for many things since antiquity. We have seven days in a week, seven is the number of the sum of any two opposite sides of a die, there are seven deadly sins, etc.
The number seven is well-exercised in Christianity:
[Wikipedia]
But other religions and cultures reserve special significance for the number as well. It is "a highly symbolic number in the Torah, alluding to the infusion of spirituality and Godliness into the creation," and "the Seven Lucky Gods refer to the seven gods of good fortune in Japanese mythology."
[Ibid.]
There is too much more to list here.
Answered by Robusto on September 26, 2021
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