humble pie

humble pie
\ \ [17] Until the 19th century, humble pie was simply a pie made from the internal organs of a deer or other animal (‘Mrs Turner did bring us an umble pie hot out of her oven’, Samuel Pepys, Diary 8 July 1663). Humble has no etymological connection with the adjective humblemeek’; it is an alteration of the now extinct numblesoffal’ [14] (which came ultimately from Latin lumulus, a diminutive of lumbusloin’, from which English gets loin and lumbar). Numbles became umbles (perhaps from misanalysis of a numble as an umble in contexts such as numble pie), and from there it was a short step to humble; but the expression eat humble pie is not recorded in the sense ‘be humiliated’ until the 1830s. It combines the notion of ‘food fit only for those of lowly status’ with a fortuitous resemblance to the adjective humble.
\ \ Cf.LOIN, LUMBAR

Word origins - 2ed. . 2005.

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  • humble pie — [17] Until the 19th century, humble pie was simply a pie made from the internal organs of a deer or other animal (‘Mrs Turner did bring us an umble pie hot out of her oven’, Samuel Pepys, Diary 8 July 1663). Humble has no etymological connection… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • humble pie — noun Etymology: humbles 1. a. : a meat pie formerly made of the inferior parts of a deer and served to the huntsman and other servants b. : a meat pie made of the humbles of a hog 2. [influenced in meaning by humble ( …   Useful english dictionary

  • humble pie — 1. humility forced upon someone, often under embarrassing conditions; humiliation. 2. Obs. a pie made of the viscera and other inferior parts of deer or the like. 3. eat humble pie, to be forced to apologize humbly; suffer humiliation: He had to… …   Universalium

  • humble pie — n. (forced) to eat humble pie * * * (forced) to eat humble pie …   Combinatory dictionary

  • humble pie — hum′ble pie′ n. humility forced upon someone; humiliation • eat humble pie …   From formal English to slang

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