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What's the origin of the phrase "top brass"?

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osprey88 | 22:12 Sun 02nd Mar 2008 | Phrases & Sayings
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What's the origin of the phrase "top brass"?
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I've heard it's to do with brass details on a military cap, worn by Generals etc.
'Brass' in this sense is exactly as Carol says above and was originally an american idiom. 'Scrambled egg' - rather than brass - is the British way of referring to the gold scrollwork on the peak of very senior officers' caps. As ever, our notion seems much more modest somehow!
When my father was a young police constable in Scotland he was assured that one day he would have "snaw on his bunnet"` - police forces using silver rather than gold braid on senior ranks' caps.
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Thanks for your help, I had some vague notion it had a military basis, but the only brass I could think of was buttons!

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