Word Story 2:

Arrtgs Easy As Pie

Meaning: Very easy.

Origin: There are many similes in English that have the form 'as X as Y'. For example, 'as white as snow', 'as dead as a dodo' and, risking a group slander action from our noble friends, 'as drunk as a lord'.

There are various mid 19th century US citations that, whilst not using 'as easy as pie' verbatim, do point to 'pie' being used to denote pleasantry and ease. 'Pie' in this sense is archetypal American, as American as apple pie in fact. The usage first comes in the phrase 'as nice as pie', as found here in Which: Right or Left? (1855): "For nearly a week afterwards, the domestics observed significantly to each other, that Miss Isabella was as 'nice as pie!'"

Mark Twain frequently used just 'pie' to mean pleasant or accommodating: In The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, 1884, "You're always as polite as pie to them."

Pie was also used at that time for something that was easy to accomplish. The US magazine Sporting Life, May 1886: "As for stealing second and third, it's like eating pie."

'Pie in the sky', also an American phrase from around the same time, refers to 'pie' as something pleasant that we will receive eventually.

The earliest example of the actual phrase 'as easy as pie' comes from the Rhode Island newspaper The Newport Mercury, June 1887 - in a comic story about two down and outs in New York: "You see veuever I goes I takes away mit me a silverspoon or a knife or somethings, an' I gets two or three dollars for them. It's easy as pie. Vy don't you try it?"

Pie seems to rank right up there with cake in the US lexicon of ease and pleasantry - 'a piece of cake', 'take the cake', 'cake-walk' are all American phrases from the 19th century.

In Context: The test on Friday will be easy as pie for those who have studied!

Think About It: Is pie really easy to make? I think it’s much easier to eat! Yummy!

 

 





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