Ev 1669 Last Couple Help Please
Crosswords4 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by joe1. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.While usually in agreement with Q, I think there's another explanation for this little used phrase. A similar cliche' still in use is "Get one's goat". This is fairly clear in meaning... i.e.,becoming upset due to an event or action on the part of another. This phrase (Act the goat) I believe, has a close relationship to our question. The origin may be related to the the belief in England (one source suggests Wales) that goats have a calming effect on milk cows. Similarly, in the U.S., at least c1900, a goat was kept in the barns of thoroughbred race horses and were thought to have the same calming effect. So, in this view, Act the goat has, possibly, an opposing meaning to being foolish.
The phrase may also find its genesis (pun only slightly intended) in the Bible reference found in Leviticus, Chapter 16, concerning the use of a scapegoat to banish the sins of the nation of Israel. That option is probably more obscure, in mu humble opinion...