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Home Arts & Entertainment

Greene Gardens: Bee Idioms – How Did They Start?

Other by Other
April 26, 2023
in Arts & Entertainment, Community, Education, Seasonal, Special Interest
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Bee - Apis mellifera - pollinates a blossom of the ox-eye- Buphthalmum salicifolium. Buphthalmum salicifolium is a species of flowering plant in the aster family, Asteraceae. It is known by the common name ox-eye. It is native to Europe.

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By Lisa Lewis of the Greene County Master Gardeners

Bees are a vital part of our vegetable and flower garden life cycle. Over the years, several sayings about bees worked their way into our everyday language. Here are just a few.

Make a beeline for: The 1908 Davenport Daily Ledger reported that Gustav Stengel, Sr. of Rock Island, was thrown from his sleigh when his horse became frightened, turned abruptly, and made a beeline for home. Bees head out to a source of nectar after watching a forager bee’s wiggle dance or a bee returning to the hive fully laden with pollen and nectar. Bees fly rapidly in the shortest, straightest line available, ignoring any distraction.

A bee in your bonnet: This idiom traces back to Virgil’s Aeneid from 1553. The phrase “hede full of beis” means being preoccupied with a strange idea that conjures an agitated state one would be in if a bee was buzzing around inside one’s hat.

The bee’s knees: This phrase traces to the late 1700s when it referred to anything stylish, especially something small and delicate, such as a lace collar or the tiny joint in a bee’s leg. In the 1920s, other groovy sayings, like the “cat’s whiskers,” “snake’s hips,” and “flea’s eyebrows,” revived this saying.

Spelling bee: A “bee” is a meeting of people working together for the common good of the group since at least the 1700s. For example, Americans would join a husking bee to strip corn. The phrase expanded to include many purposeful gatherings like Scripps National Spelling Bee.

Put the bee on: This saying meant asking someone for money, often with a pitiful, woe-is-me tale. It goes to the American frontier days when churchgoers would organize a “bee” to gather donations to pay the preacher.

Let’s end with a few silly jokes appropriate to our topic.

What does a bee use to style his hair?  A honeycomb.

Why do bees hum?  They forgot the words.

What do you call a wasp? A wanna-bee.

SOURCE: Steinmetz, K. Time Magazine. Behind the Bee’s Knees: The Origin of Nine Bee-Inspired Sayings. August 7, 2013.   https://time.com/3897638/bee-inspired-sayings/  

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