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Etymology is the -ology that gets no respect, a historical science that few people realize is a science. Although linguists use sophisticated comparative methods to analyze ancient roots of words, and more modern derivations can often be proven or disproven by research documenting precise early usages, such methods and findings are typically disregarded by word lovers who delight in colorful stories, even those that fly in the face of evidence -- or plausibility.

 
Theories as to what "nine yards" originally referred to are legion.

It is a phrase rather than a word that is the most prominent etymological riddle of our time. That phrase, the whole nine yards, is both a magnet for fervid speculation and a goal that can be targeted with powerful modern research techniques. Databases including Google Books, ProQuest Historical Newspapers, and Newspaperarchive have digitized billions of pages of old books, newspapers, journals, and legal documents and made them searchable. With vast segments of the English-language book and periodical literature of past centuries now searchable, the Oxford English Dictionary and a talented group of amateur etymologists are able to dig deep into the history of the language and produce authoritative evidence previously unimaginable.

The whole nine yards is a commonly used expression denoting "everything possible," as in this example from the American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms: "He decided to take everything to college -- his books, his stereo, his computer, his skis, the whole nine yards." Popular theories as to what "nine yards" originally referred to are legion. Ben Zimmer '92, in an excellent article on the Visual Thesaurus website, enumerates the following conjectures:

capacity of a ready-made concrete truck, coal truck, or garbage truck (cubic yards);

amount of cloth needed for a Scottish kilt, burial shroud, or three-piece suit;

length of some piece of World War II military equipment (bomb rack, ammunition belt, etc.);

yardage in American football;

other types of "yards": properties on a city block, naval shipyards, yardarms on a sailing ship, etc.

The first three of these in particular have many passionate adherents, although all are lacking in documentation and have holes in their explanations; ammunition, for example, is measured by rounds rather than length.

Scientific study of TWNY began with the Oxford English Dictionary, which traced its usage back to 1970. J. E. Lighter's Historical Dictionary of American Slang pushed the earliest dating back to 1967, citing The Doom Pussy, a book by Elaine Shepard about Vietnam War Air Force pilots. At that point all the earliest known citations were Air Force-related, pointing strongly to a military provenance. The OED and Lighter had used traditional historical-lexicographical procedures (random reading of books and other sources) to find their evidence, but then the database jockeys got into the act. A cadre of "antedaters" revealed a succession of older citations, reporting their discoveries on the Internet discussion list of the American Dialect Society.

 
Why would a WWII term leave no trace of usage before the 1960s?

First, Sam Clements used Newspaperarchive to unearth a story about NASA slang in the San Antonio Express and News, April 18, 1964, including this tidbit: "'Give 'em the whole nine yards' means an item-by-item report on any project." Given the close nexus between the Air Force and NASA, the sentence seemed to strengthen the Air Force theory.

Online lexicography marched on, however. Bonnie Taylor-Blake posted to the ADS list a Google Books-derived 1962 usage of nine yards that clearly seems to be the same idiom as whole nine yards:

Your staff of testers cannot fairly and equitably appraise the Chevrolet Impala sedan, with all nine yards of goodies, against the Plymouth Savoy which has straight shift and none of the mechanical conveniences which are quite common now.

Finally, Stephen Goranson, also searching Google Books, came up with a slightly earlier passage in a short story by Robert E. Wegner:

Then the dog would catch on and go ki-yi-yi-ing from one to the other of the shouting pyjama clad participants mad, mad, mad, the consequence of house, home, kids, respectability, status as a college professor and the whole nine yards, as a brush salesman who came by the house was fond of saying, the whole damn nine yards.

All this state-of-the-art research has not so far gotten us to the etymological El Dorado of a definitive explanation. The two earliest examples are somewhat contradictory in their import: the Car Life one assumes that the reader readily understands the nine yards metaphor, while the Michigan's Voices one introduces it as a cryptic catchphrase of a brush salesman. They do both seem to treat nine yards as the length of an extensive list (as does the third-oldest occurrence).

Perhaps their main contribution is as negative evidence. Their context does not relate to the military, nor to the realms of cloth, concrete, or football. They are sufficiently removed from World War II to raise serious doubts about how a term from that war could have attained currency in the 1960s yet left no trace of prior usage. We don't yet have answers, but the questions are moving in new directions as the fog of speculation gives way to the light of fact.   the end



9 yards of beer

I read with interest Professor Shapiro's discussion of the origins of the phrase "the whole nine yards." However, none of the explanations that he presented for its origins accords with what I learned about it. My understanding is that a "yard" was a large measure of alcohol. If a person drank the whole nine yards, that was considered quite an achievement. A restaurant that I used to frequent in Bloomington, Indiana, actually had what they claimed to be the glassware that measured out an entire yard of beer. From what I could see, drinking nine of those glasses would occasion a call to the undertaker rather than a pat on the back.

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Guns & ammo

I've never agreed that "the whole nine yards" has to do with American football, since first down is ten yards.

 
"'Give 'em the whole nine yards' meant 'empty your guns.'"

While at Yale Med I read Fighter: The True Story of the Battle of Britain, a 1977 nonfiction work by one of my favorite spy novelists at that time, Len Deighton. In this well researched book, "the whole nine yards" is said to refer to the length of the ammunition belts that the Spitfire and Hurricane fighter planes used. Thus the expression "give 'em the whole nine yards" meant "empty your guns."

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Giving one's all

I was surprised at the uncertainty concerning the expression "the whole nine yards." My initial thought was, "everybody knows that."

 
WW II ammunition belts were 27 feet in length.

As a boy growing up during World War II, my friends and I devoured as much of the minutia of military matters as we could get. The expression "the whole nine yards" was used by pilots of the P-51 pursuit fighter, introduced to the European Theater of Operations in 1944. The ammunition belts of its 50 cal guns were 27 feet in length. When on occasion a pilot returned to base with fuel in his tanks and was asked why he had landed, he usually had as his reason, "I've shot the whole nine yards," and was thus out of ammo. He couldn't continue to sortie until he had landed and reloaded.

As boys, we picked up the expression and applied it whenever we wished to express that one had given everything he had.

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"Give 'em the whole nine yards"

My Air Force friend tells me that the belts of machine gun bullets for US bombers in World War II were 27 feet long. When heavy firing was needed, it was "Give 'em the whole nine yards."

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