Law5 mins ago
Boo to a Goose?
5 Answers
I wonder where this originates from?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Because of the supposed stupidity of the bird of that name, the word 'goose' has meant a simpleton since the 1500s. The word 'boo' in this context is the sudden, loud version of it...the one adults sometimes use to surprise or 'frighten' children...rather than the disapproving anti-cheering version. So, 'saying boo to a goose' - whether human or avian - is about the least brave thing one could imagine doing and, as a result, very shy people are accused of being unable to do even that.
I rather suspect the 'bravery and 'guard-doggery' qualities of geese applies only in the plural and only territorially. A solitary goose - as in the saying being discussed - is probably just the silly thing people clearly imagined it to be. Things may be different when protecting eggs or young perhaps, but I don't think you'd have much to fear from a single female in a field! Perhaps the originator of the phrase wasn't so dim after all?