What If The Labour Party Got Rid Of...
Politics5 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by delly0408. 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.Generally speaking, The Oxford English Dictionary (TOED) is the final arbiter as far as the etymology of English words is concerned. Let me tell you precisely what it says on this matter...
"6. Brickmaking (see quot)
1876 Sir E Becket 'Brick Building'
Making bricks with a hollow in one or both faces which I have heard absurdly called a frog."
Doesn't that 'absurdly' just crease you up? However, that is all the dictionary has to say on the matter. I think you can take it that - if the scholars at TOED have failed to come up with an acceptable explanation - it's highly unlikely that anyone else is going to. Accordingly, I should treat the 'folk etymology' offerings from the sources mentioned earlier with a pinch of salt, Delly.