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origin of saying 'Gurd your loins'
when something is expected to happen soon, that could have a detrimental affect on your well being, you are often told to ''gurd your loins'' can anyone shed any light on the origins of this.
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No best answer has yet been selected by rcrayner. 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.I've no complaint with Andy's explanation...perfectly effective, as always. The verb 'gird' is more or less obsolete nowadays though the noun related to it...'girdle'...is still common enough. That is, it suggests a tightening-up of the clothing below the belt.
In biblical times, men wore loose robes, such as are still seen in the Middle East, so - in preparation for any sort of physical activity - it was necessary for these to be hitched up above the knees and somehow bound in place with a belt or girdle. In the Bible itself, 2nd Kings Chapter 4 verse 29 has the words: "Then he said to Gehazi, gird up thy loins and take my staff and go thy way."
When we use that phrase now, it is generally in an effort to give just such a historical/biblical slant to our words.
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