English edit

Alternative forms edit

  • shank's nag, shanks-naig, shanks-nag.

Etymology edit

Traced back to shanks-nag, 1758; The expression -- believed to be Scottish in origin (i.e. shanks-naig 1774), refers to the use of shank to refer to the part of the human leg between the knee and ankle.

Noun edit

shanks' nag (plural shanks' nags)

  1. (idiomatic, Scotland, archaic) Transportation by foot. To "take a shanks' nag" means using one's own legs to walk.
    • 1774, Robert Fergusson, Poems on Various Subjects:
      He took shanks-naig, but fient may care.

Derived terms edit

Related terms edit

Translations edit

References edit

  • Shanks' mare, by Michael Quinion, World Wide Words, 2002-08-31
  • Shanks' mare, Gary Martin, 2007.
  • shanks-nag, in A Glossary of the Cleveland Dialect: Explanatory, Derivative, and Critical, by John Christopher Atkinson. J.R. Smith: 1868, p. 442.