Clogs were the traditional workers’ footwear in several trades in the industrial towns and cities of midlands and northern Britain, for women as well as men, now rarely seen but at one time almost an icon of working class life. The sound of workers’ clogs on cobbled streets at the end of a shift has been likened to Thunder.
The verb to pop may be the old term for pawning goods. The implication is that someone would only want to pawn his clogs when he had no further need for them, that is, when he was about to die. But it’s also possible that it’s linked to the idiom to pop off (an abbreviation of pop off the hooks), which can also mean to die.
On the basis of citation evidence, it looks like a pseudo-archaic form, unrecorded from times when workers did usually wear clogs to work and did often pawn small items each week to tide them over cash shortages. But I have had one subscriber tell me that he clearly remembers it being used in Lincolnshire 50 years ago, so it may be yet another example of a folk expression that existed for generations without being recorded in print.
2007-01-15 13:46:10
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answer #1
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answered by katie 3
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Or kicking the bucket perhaps.....
Clogs originated in Holland(Netherlands) though so unsure of the british connection.
I asked myself why we call what is commonly known as a 'dish cloth' these days as a 'tea towel'; the answer is obvious with that one though.
2007-01-15 21:44:33
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answer #2
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answered by ? 3
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