> My little desk dictionary defines "poet" as "a creative artist of great
sensitivity."  Fits Joni to a "T" methinks.(But now I'm wondering how the
expression "to a T" originated. Anyone? Class? Jimmy? Jenny? Bueller? :-) 

TO A T  "We use this expression very commonly in the sense of minute
exactness, perfection; as, the coat fits to a T; the meat was done to a T.
It is easy to dismiss the origin of the expression as, I am sorry to say,
some of our leading dictionaries do, by attributing it to the draftsmans
T-square, which is supposed to be an exact instrument, but the evidence
indicates that the expression was in common English use before the T-square
got its name. To a T dates back to the seventeenth century in literary
use and was undoubtedly common in everyday speech long before any writer
dared to or thought to use it in print. But it is likely that the name of
the instrument, T-square, would have been in print shortly after its
invention, yet the first mention is in the eighteenth century. The sense of
the expression corresponds, however, with the older one, to a tittle,
which appeared almost a century earlier, and meant to a dot, as in jot
or tittle. Beaumont used it in 1607, and it is probably that colloquial
use long preceded his employment of the phrase" From "2107 Curious Word
Origins, Sayings & Expressions from White Elephants to a Song and Dance" by
Charles Earle Funk (Galahad Books, New York, 1993).











--- Victor Johnson
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Visit http://www.cdbaby.com/victorjohnson

Look for the new album "Parsonage Lane" in March 2003
Produced by Chris Rosser at Hollow Reed Studios

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