Sunday, October 26, 2008

Many a little makes a mickle

Many a little makes a mickle

Meaning

Many small amounts accumulate to make a large amount.

Origin

A mickle, or as they prefer it in Scotland, a muckle, means 'great or
large in size'. Apart from 'many a little (or pickle) makes a mickle'
the words only now remain in use in UK place-names, like Muckle Flugga
in Shetland (which amply lives up to its translated name of 'large,
steep-sided island') and Mickleover in Derbyshire (listed in the
Domesday Book as Magna Oufra - 'large village on the hill'). 'Over'
and 'upper' are very common prefixes in English place-names, along
with their opposites 'under', 'lower', 'nether' or 'little'. Examples
of these are the Cotswold villages of Upper and Lower Slaughter, and
the Hampshire villages of Over and Nether Wallop. The word 'much'
derives from the Old English 'mickle' and has now almost entirely
replaced it. 'Much' is also used in place-names like Much Wenlock,
Shropshire (there's also a Little Wenlock, of course).

The proverbial phrase 'many a little makes a mickle' has now itself
been largely superseded by the 18th century 'look after the pennies
(originally, 'take care of the pence'), and the pounds will look after
('take care of') themselves'.

The first mention in print of what was undoubtedly an older proverb
comes in a 1614 work by William Camden, with a rather desultory title
- Remaines of a greater worke concerning Britaine, 1605:

"Many a little makes a micle."

In the next century it was taken across the Atlantic by George
Washington, who included it in Writings, 1793:

"A Scotch [steady on George, I think they prefer to be called Scots]
addage, than which nothing in nature is more true 'that many mickles
make a muckle'."

The phrase's variant form 'many a mickle makes a muckle' is also
sometimes heard. This 20th century version is actually nonsensical as
it derives from the misapprehension that mickle and muckle, rather
than meaning the same thing, mean 'small' and 'large' respectively.

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