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y'know... is it "jury rigged" or "jerry rigged"? I've always heard it as "jury rigged" and Wikipedia agrees. But I keep seeing people use "jerry rigged"

@wildweasel I think “jerry” is just a common mistake, like “baited breath”

@wildweasel I've always known it to be 'jury rigged', for the record

@wildweasel it is my understanding that it is "Jerry rigged" from world war ii usage referring to Germans as Jerry's? and their equipment being slapdash?

but to be honest as I write this it suddenly sounds super made up and I'm filled with doubt???

@earthshaking I was linked to a Merriam-Webster article that almost confirms that, actually, but also says that "Jerry-rigged"/"Jerry-built" has been in use since the 19th century. So, probably its use in war-time was only strengthened by that tendency.

(An unrelated thing I always wondered though, if the British called the Germans "jerries" and the Germans called the British "tommies," was that where Tom & Jerry's names came from?)

@wildweasel Ah, I saw that my friend effika linked that to you earlier, yep. It was a more complex of an evolution than i thought!

@wildweasel @earthshaking let the Wikipedia article, the origin isn't crystal clear. An employee won $50 to rename them (from Jasper & Jinx) but I guess nobody asked him where he got the name, so there's a few ways it could have come about. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_an

@wildweasel @misty @earthshaking @lunarloony M-W says that both versions are correct, and older than we think. Also introduces a third version (jerry-built) I never heard before! merriam-webster.com/grammar/je

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