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Does anyone know where the term "kip" originates from (as in I'm having a kip (sleep))?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Craster and Seahouses: "Having a Kip"
Alongside Seahouses, the fishing village of Craster was once the kipper capital of England, smoking over 25,000 fish a day in the early part of this century.
The fish were gutted by Scottish fishwives who lived in ramshackle buildings, called "Kip Houses", which were only suitable for sleeping in. Hence, having a kip!
Alongside Seahouses, the fishing village of Craster was once the kipper capital of England, smoking over 25,000 fish a day in the early part of this century.
The fish were gutted by Scottish fishwives who lived in ramshackle buildings, called "Kip Houses", which were only suitable for sleeping in. Hence, having a kip!
'Kip' - from the Dutch word 'kippe' - meant a low quality drinking-house or brothel from the early 1700s. In the next century, it also took on the idea of low quality lodgings...a doss-house, in effect. From there, it developed further to mean either a bed or a sleep, by the middle of the 19th century.