{"id":3146,"date":"2022-05-03T18:07:15","date_gmt":"2022-05-03T18:07:15","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/english-grammar-lessons.com\/?p=3146"},"modified":"2022-05-03T18:07:15","modified_gmt":"2022-05-03T18:07:15","slug":"beating-a-dead-horse-meaning","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/english-grammar-lessons.com\/beating-a-dead-horse-meaning\/","title":{"rendered":"Beating a Dead Horse \u2013 Meaning, Origin and Usage"},"content":{"rendered":"

Are you looking for a way to tell someone they are trying to complete a futile task? If so, you could ask them to stop \u201cbeating a dead horse<\/em>.\u201d This post unpacks the meaning and origin of this expression.<\/p>\n

Meaning<\/h2>\n

The expression \u201cbeat a dead horse<\/em>\u201d means that your actions on a task are fruitless and provide no progress to achieving a result.<\/strong><\/p>\n

It\u2019s a way of telling someone to change their behavior or take a new approach to problem-solving. It\u2019s also a way to say to people that you are tired of hearing them discuss the same topics repeatedly.<\/p>\n

Example Usage<\/h2>\n

\u201cGosh, I\u2019m tired of hearing you bring that up time and time again. Don\u2019t you ever get tired of beating a dead horse?\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cThere\u2019s Mike going on about how we all need to chip in to save the environment. Man, that guy will never stop beating a dead horse, and no one listens to him.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cI feel like I\u2019m beating a dead horse with this. No matter what I do, it doesn\u2019t change anything, and I\u2019m starting to get really frustrated with everything.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cThe manager keeps on beating a dead horse about us following procedure. It\u2019s somewhat annoying to hear him drone on about it every day when we all comply with the procedures anyway.\u201d<\/p>\n

\"Are \"\"<\/p>\n

Origin<\/h2>\n

The origin of the expression \"beat a dead horse\" comes from the original phrase, \"flogging a dead horse.\" However, modern language no longer uses the word \"flogging\" to describe a beating, hence the change in the phrase.<\/p>\n

The original phrase \"flogging a dead horse\" appears in the 1600s in the Richard Brome play \"The Antipodes,\" performed in 1638 and published in 1640.<\/p>\n

\"He cur'd a country gentleman that fell mad<\/p>\n

For spending of his land before he sold it;<\/p>\n

That is, 'twas sold to pay his debts - all went<\/p>\n

That way for a dead horse, as one would say!\"<\/p>\n

The modern version, \"beating a dead horse,\" first appeared in print in 1859. It comes from a report referencing a UK parliamentary debate between Lord Elcho, the Sixth Earl of March, and Francis Wemyss-Charteris Douglas, The Eighth Earl of Wemyss.<\/p>\n

It features in Volume 153. 1859 of Hansard's parliamentary debates, as follows.<\/p>\n

\"If the hon. Member for Birmingham [John Bright] had been present, he would have asked the hon. Gentleman [Lord Elcho] whether he was satisfied with the results of his winter campaign. It was notorious that he was not, and a saying was attributed to him that he found he was \"flogging a dead horse.\"<\/p>\n