Where does the phrase "seen the elephant" come from?
Why is it relevant to battle experience?
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Where does the phrase "seen the elephant" come from?
Why is it relevant to battle experience?
I imagine that implies "is such a badass veteran that he is not even impressed by elephants anymore".
Just remember how Sam lived up during the last half of Return of the King.
Alexander's soliders that came all the way up to india. They were so experienced and came so far that they saw elephants.
Presumably a leader who has seen elephants before is better equipped to deal with them and gets a bonus or doesn't get a penalty when fighting against them.
i thought it was a variation of "seen it all"-> he can't be impressed easily
elephants were probably the most exotic thing in warfare most could imagine and would also damage the troop moral BEFORE the battle a commander who's not impressed by elephants most likely is not impressed by anything but aliens with laser rifles :D and if the troops see how untuched their leader is they get a moral boost aswell.
Isn't the phrase from the American Civil War?
"He has seen the elephant" = "he has been in battle"
It was popularized from a little bit before that (say, early 1800s), and derives from seeing elephants in travelling circuses, when it just meant "seeing something exotic." You are right, though, that it took on the more common usage of "been in battle" (or, more generally, "a loss of innocence") in the American Civil War.
I wouldn't be surprised if it's even older than that though, at least in some form.
The way I understood it, the gist is basically "has now seen everything there is to it and won't be much amazed by too much anymore". Eg. the elephant, the most exotic and impressive critter in the circus.
Since it appears that no one saw my post, here's a longer version:
Quote:
Originally Posted by google
As K Raso so helpfully put it, I have always heard the phrase used to refer to someone who has seen it all, done it all, and done it all right back at other people. When my generals get this trait, I have them clean up and go home. They're tired, and they want to go live on their country estates.
K Raso's post sums it up nicely and the saying is almost certainly an American saying that originated in the eary 19th century and became attatched to the first battle experiance of Civil War soldoers.
It probably has nothing to do with the exploits of ancient warriors as they would have been long forgotten.
Also it is not a phrase noted in England until it migrates from the USA, which seems to make it uniquely American as English soldiers would have encountered Elephants a good century earlier in India, Clive of India, Battle of Plassey etc.
Hmm, I've never, ever heard that expression used before. You learn something new every day. :yes:
"See the lions" is not a phrase I have heard or read in the UK, it could be regional, I'm from the NW of England or it could be a phrase that has fallen out of popular usage.
I once had a kH generals who defend athenai many times from Macedonian attacks, never travel more than Athenai-Korinthos-Sparta-Athenai, and spend nearly all his time to sit down in the governor's chair on Athenai... never fight against elephant-contaminated army...... and
. I
. Laugh
. With
. Disbelief
. when
. see
He have trait... seen the elephants....:laugh4::smash:
I hope thet weird and illogical trait was changed in EB II, at least in its name, better to be renamed :
Chempion veterans, Extremely Grizzled, has nine lives, or anything.... that doesn't implicitly said that "He has fight the elephants". Seen the elephant traits on itself maybe better to be triggred with 5 battle or more that he must fight against an elephant-contaminated army, or it becomes an illogical traits....
nb: better gives the battle weary ones in logical sense...
It is an expression. Nothing weird or illogical about it...
Expressions are not meant to be taken literally...
who wrote that expression? maybe he could explain what he meant
Thanks for the response Chris. I asked my friend, who is a bit of an etymology hobbyist, and he didn't know anything about it either. I did a cursory google search and came up with this:
wordorigins.com linkQuote:
Originally Posted by wordorigins.org
However, that was the only reference to "see the lions" I could find on the web in a quick search. It sounds like you're right, and that it feel out of usage.