ish ka bibble
English
Etymology
Borrowing from Yiddish, meaning "I should worry". The origins are disputed. One theory is that it is a corruption of the German nicht gefiedelt ("not flustered"). Another possibility is that it comes from German ich kaan bedibbert ("I am abashed"). Possibly a fake Yiddishism.[1]
Phrase
ish ka bibble
- Why should I worry?; I don't care.
- 1913, The Santa Fe Magazine - Volume 8, page 74:
- Guess they thought we would crawfish, But there was never a word or a quibble ; When they offered us freights, among others, We said "Let 'em come, ish-ka-bibble."
- 1914, Steam Machinery: A Magazine of Men, Machinery and Methods:
- Surveying your individual reasons, Nature remarks "Ish ka bibble" in a bored tone and goes on to run the square and the level over the job.
- 1989, Helen Harris Perlman, The Dancing Clock, and Other Childhood Memories, page 95:
- "Guess I'll do some diving from the raft today," I said, pointedly, to Sonny. "Ish ka bibble," Sonny said.
See also
References
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