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Taffy or toffee?
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Was the phrase 'a load of old toffee' originally an Ann Robinson-style jibe at the sometimes flowery speech of the Welsh?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.'Toffee', to suggest incompetence or nonsense first appeared in the early 20th century. Its earliest recorded use in writing was in the 'London Illustrated News' in 1914, when a soldier reported that their opponents "couldn't shoot for toffee." So, we're probably looking at military slang here, rather than Ann Robinson, and at the Germans, perhaps, rather than the Welsh!