English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Why do we say cheers when we raise our glasses ???

2006-09-28 07:18:53 · 18 answers · asked by redjonjak 2 in Society & Culture Etiquette

18 answers

This is a fine tribute to the wonderful absurdity of the English language: when you say, “Cheers,” you’re literally saying, “Faces.”

“Face” or “countenance” was the meaning of the original late-Latin word cara, a word whose mysterious history may include Greek, African and Spanish influence.

Old French picked up cara in the forms chiere and chere, which then entered English around 1200 as “cheer.” The meaning remained the same: “face,” or the expression on the face.

The word then became a model for how definitions tend to become more abstract over time. By 1300, “cheer” meant “mood” (presumably, as expressed on the face). “What cheer with you?” was a common greeting; it also became possible to “cheer someone up.”

“Cheer” also became equated with joyfulness; if you were “cheerful,” you were filled with good cheer.

Later in the 1300s, “cheer” could also mean a friendly party, or the food and drink at such a party. From this came the wise maxim, “The fewer the better cheer”—the fewer people at a party, the more food and drink for each.

By the 1500s, the definition was so general that “cheer” could refer to anything that gave comfort or joy.

From this, in the 1700s, came the meaning of a cry of encouragement or approval—for example, the “cheers” of a crowd.

In trying to figure out how “cheers!” became a drinking salutation, it’s tempting to go back to that 1300s meaning of booze at a party—especially since it seemed to linger as late as the 1880s in the bar term “cheerer” (a glass of booze, so named for its effect on the drinker).

But actually, the key meaning seems to be the latest—a shout of encouragement.

Around 1900, a subtle shift occurred in which the word “cheer” itself became a cheer, most notably in the plural formula, “Three cheers!”

By 1910-15, “cheers” was turning up in British English as both an informal goodbye and as a drinking salutation—in both cases clearly referring to the “shout of encouragement” idea.

However, “cheers” first had to battle the British mania for putting “o” on the end of any available word. It was quickly altered into the lighter form, “cheero,” which was altered further by British officers in World War I to become “cheerio.”

It wasn’t until after World War II that the “o” began disappearing and “cheers” became the standard drinking salutation in both England and the US.

2006-09-28 07:24:08 · answer #1 · answered by Duncarin 5 · 3 0

Maybe its an abbreviation of the toast "good cheer to all men", and perhaps we say it to celebrate having a drink with friends and wish them all the best.

2006-09-28 07:51:06 · answer #2 · answered by aliantha2004 4 · 0 0

Its an old fashioned cheer!! when people cheer they put their hands in the air.. so dink in hand is just a cheer and a toast by drinking..

2006-09-28 07:24:18 · answer #3 · answered by confused 6 · 0 0

You are wishing people good Cheer (ie happiness)

2006-09-28 07:52:55 · answer #4 · answered by malcy 6 · 0 0

I take it like a salute to the drink. That way when you all get drunk, people don't have to apologize for what they have done. I do have a weird sense of thinking?

2006-09-28 07:22:49 · answer #5 · answered by Boricua Born 5 · 0 0

Same as bon apetite I guess. Saves making a dedication too.

2006-09-28 07:50:02 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It is like we seal the deal, also like saying amen after a prayer.

2006-09-28 07:34:55 · answer #7 · answered by Teddy Bear 4 · 0 0

Good manners and its just a nice old British thing.

2006-09-28 13:42:32 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

well if you think of the meaning of cheers as in people cheering at a concert or something then it's like a happy thing!
ooo i dunno!

2006-09-28 07:24:34 · answer #9 · answered by Button.Monster 3 · 0 0

Because it's better that yelling, "Profanity!"
or
because we all want to go where everybody knows our names. lol

2006-09-28 07:24:46 · answer #10 · answered by Coo coo achoo 6 · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers