no soap
English
Etymology
The phrase appears, with no clear meaning, in a 1755 Samuel Foote nonsense prose poem, "The Grand Panjandrum". In the U.S., soap took on the meaning of money (see OED), and so no soap was a denial of money, say in response to a request for some.
Phrase
- It is (or was) a failure.
- 1942, Stout, Rex, Black Orchids, Farrar & Rinehart:
- I went back down to the men's room on the second floor and yelled his name in front of the private apartments, but no soap.
- 1953, Bellow, Saul, chapter 25, in The Adventures of Augie March, Viking Press:
- I waited for his assistance but it didn't come. He let me trail for I don't know how long. I hollered and cried, cursed, rocked the boat. No soap.
- 1973, Parker, Robert B., The Godwulf Manuscript, Houghton Mifflin:
- I rang. Nothing happened. I rang again and leaned on it. No soap.
- 1983 March, Friedman, Bruce Jay, “Detroit Abe”, in Esquire:
- Still and all, after weighing the pluses and minuses of Smooth's offer, he came, to the only possible conclusion for a civilized man—no soap.
- 1992, Cramer, Richard Ben, What It Takes: The Way to the White House, Random House:
- And he tried again—Lou always persisted—but no soap.
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See also
- no-soap
- no soap, radio
Anagrams
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