English Idiom: Have a Chip on Your Shoulder
Recently, I watched a program on TV called ‘Lockdown,’ about young men in an American prison. A young inmate was asked, “Has anyone ever told you that you have a chip on your shoulder?”
Someone who has a chip on his shoulder is angry all the time. He (or she) feels that he has been wronged by the world, so he is always ready for a fight. He is easily offended because he feels that he have been treated unfairly by others, or perhaps he feels inferior. He expects trouble, so he is always ready for it.
It can also mean that the person has a grievance about something. Something bad has happened to him, and he might believe it was someone else’s fault. This kind of person is constantly angry about it that it affects his behaviour. In the person’s mind, he is showing how tough he is.
*Because this expression is used to describe someone and because it uses the verb have, you can also use have got. You can also add adjectives to describe the size of the chip:
I can’t stand working with Bill; he’s got such a massive chip on his shoulder. He’s so unpleasant.
…Keira Knightley has admitted that forsaking university in favour of a film career has left her with a “chip on her shoulder” over her lack of education. . . . [She] now battles to prove to herself – and those around her – that she has brains.
– from The Telegraph (U.K.)Success never made that chip on his shoulder go away.
– about Roger Ailes, Fox News Chief, from The New York TimesJames “Sawyer” Ford [a character on the TV show LOST] started as the classic rogue with a shady past who parades around with a constant chip on his shoulder.
– from IGN.com
Origin of the expression:
This expression originated in the U.S. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the first recorded use was in 1830 in the Long Island Telegraph newspaper: When two churlish boys were determined to fight, a chip would be placed on the shoulder of one, and the other demanded to knock it off at his peril. In this case a chip is a small piece of wood. A young boy who was angry about something and determined to fight would place a small chip of wood on his shoulder and challenge another person to knock it off his shoulder. When the chip was knocked off, it meant the opponent was ready and the fight would begin. It was his way of showing everyone how tough he was. Later, in 1855, the actual expression a chip on one’s shoulder appeared in print in the Weekly Oregonian newspaper: Leland, in his last issue, struts out with a chip on his shoulder, and dares Bush to knock it off. Nowadays, the chip is figurative: there’s no physical chip of wood on someone’s shoulder, he/she just acts like there is!
Do you know someone who has a chip on their shoulder?
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Comments
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Great explanation, thank you. I think that most people have had had, at one point or another in their lives, a chip on their shoulder. Don’t you agree?
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it may have been recorded in the way you suggest in 1830. However, the phrase existed in the 18th century (1700s). It and a number of other terms/phrases related to the rule that allowed shipwrights to take home left over wood (chips). This allowance was abused in the extreme to the point that even some houses were built from the “chips”
1. “cheap as chips”
2. “chip on your shoulder” carpenters or “chippies” were told that they were not to carry chips on their shoulder in a attempt tp reduce the abuse of the system. Some argued and forced their way out of the shipyards aggressively
3. “Chip off the old block”