安德烈 (Andrea)
Community Tutor
Nettle and mettle Hello, in the expression "grasp the nettle" (I know what it means, I heard it in Peep Show, which I watch every day) might the word "mettle" be sort of a synonym? Because here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gh6yDuQ7Xko at 20.25 of the player the father of Sophie says to Mark "Come on, you got to grasp the nettle" but then, at 20.52 it seems to me that Mark replies to Sophie's question with the word "mettle" which, checking on the Cambride Dictonary, looks like it might have a similar meaning with "nettle". So, is this a sort of pun or here are indeed "nettle" and "mettle" interchangeable? Thank you
Nov 13, 2016 8:53 AM
Answers · 3
2
Hi Andrea, Unfortunately I couldn't watch the clip -- your link took me to a playlist rather than a specific episode. No, they're not synonyms. "mettle" isn't a common word and is only really encountered in the expression "to test one's mettle" where, as you know, it means to see/interrogate what someone is made of. "nettle," by contrast, is a very common word - we have a lot of this plant in the UK - and "to grasp the nettle" means to engage wholeheartedly with an uncomfortable or difficult situation. Therefore, someone's mettle can be tested by the alacrity with which they grasp the nettle but the similarity of these words ends with how they look and sound. Using them together, the writers are playing with the sounds of the language for comic effect but it doesn't reveal synonymy. It's fun wordplay though! Best wishes, Jon
November 13, 2016
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