鲜花( 152) 鸡蛋( 1)
|
楼主 |
发表于 2009-11-21 18:11
|
显示全部楼层
I don't think the phrase has any racial overtones at all.
3 E5 M1 f; R0 m8 M/ u1 E, H9 X: : A buck is slang for a US dollar.
! i2 r0 W" n; ?; l$ Y' \" P+ q: : So the phrase means that since cleaning product A is more concentrated and stronger than cleaning product B and they are priced the same then product A is known to have "more bang for the buck".1 J0 n, i; y! a4 I+ E! z
8 W+ C" S6 F& Q5 d8 q( A; v4 A: The phrase, which means 'value for one's money', was originally a political one. Its first use was quite literal: With *bang* referring to 'firepower' or 'weaponry', it really did mean 'bombs for one's money'. The alliteration of *bang* and *buck* helps to make the phrase memorable.# \7 Z' b3 I" ^
: The earliest confirmed mention of *bang for the buck* is found in 1968 in the first edition of William Safire's *New Language of Politics*. Mr. Safire claims that the phrase was coined in 1954 by Charles E. Wilson, the Secretary of Defense, in reference to the "massive retaliation" policy of John Foster Dulles.
% } k6 T0 g* K q0 [; C) j, ^. e% m( z t& T8 o
While *bang* has been used in sexual senses since the seventeenth century, it is unrelated to our phrase. However, since people are always eager to give things sexual connotations whether or not they are called for, some prudence would be a good idea. |
|