• Sockdolager

    Alternative forms

    Origin

    Unknown, 1827 US,

    America in So Many Words: Words That Have Shaped America, by David K. Barnhart, Allan A. Metcalf, “1827 sockdolager”, p. 127

    presumably fanciful variant of sock ("to hit"); compare contemporary absquatulate, blustrification, discombobulate, dumfungled, goshbustified, hornswoggle, and skedaddle.

    World Wide Words|weirdwords/ww-soc1|Sockdolager|17 Oct. 1998|20 Apr. 2006

    14 American English Abroad, Richard W. Bailey, 14.1 Introduction, pp. 456–458, in The Cambridge History of the English Language, Volume 6, 1992

    Various speculative etymologies have been suggested,

    such as corruption of doxology, due to this occurring at the end of church worship, hence “finality”.

    Dictionary of Americanisms (1848), by John Russell Bartlett

    Full definition of sockdolager

    Noun

    sockdolager

    (plural sockdolagers)
    1. (US, slang, obsolete) a hard hit, a knockout or finishing blow
      • 1831, James Kirke Paulding, Lion of the West:He’ll come off as badly as a feller I once hit a sledge hammer lick over the head—a real sogdolloger.
      • 1838, James Fenimore Cooper, Home as Found:There is but one ‘sogdollager’ in the universe, and that is in Lake Oswego.
      • 1859, Bartlett's Dictionary of Americanisms"I gave the fellow a socdolager over his head with the barrel of my gun,"
      • 1884, Mark Twain, , Chapter 20.The thunder would go rumbling and grumbling away, and quit—and then rip comes another flash and another sockdologer.
    2. (US, slang, obsolete) something exceptional, a whopper
      • 1953, Ray Bradbury, The Murderer:Hey, Al, thought I'd call you from the locker room out here at Green Hills. Just made a sockdolager hole in one! A hole in one, Al! (etc.)
    3. (US, angling) A combination of two hooks which close upon each other, by means of a spring, as soon as the fish bites.

    Derived terms

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