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shameless pleading

 

 

 

 

Take it as read.

What ever.

Dear Word Detective: Today I’ve come across what appears to be an idiom which I’ve never heard before, perhaps because it appears to be British and Australian and not American. “Take it as red” seems to mean something like “take it as given,” or at least “consider it plausible.” I was wondering if you might be able to further clarify the meaning and explain the origin of the expression? — Blyden Potts.

Oh boy, here we go again. Every time I answer a question about British idioms, I get everything right except for some obscure issue of usage that several hundred cranky limeys just happen to consider the line of demarcation twixt civilization and savagery. Then the skies blacken with flocks of their indignant emails insinuating, among other things, that I endorse the maltreatment of hedgehogs. What is it with the Brits and their weird affection for hedgehogs, anyway? They taste awful.

Yet I must forge on fearlessly. The phrase you are wondering about, incidentally, is “take it as read,” not “red” (the “read” being the past tense of “to read”). I suspect that you know that and simply made a typo in your email, but one mustn’t annoy the hedgehogians.

The Oxford English Dictionary defines “to take something as read” as “to treat (a statement, a subject, etc.) as if it has been agreed, without having a discussion about it; to take for granted.” The phrase, which dates back to the late 19th century, most often seems to be used to mean “to accept something as a given or as having already been stated and heard, in order to move on to other things” (“‘It’s really I who ought to say ‘sorry,’ you know. … ‘We’ll take it all as read,’ put in Miss Wilson hastily,” 1930). “Take it as read” is a way to fast-forward past a discussion that would be pointless, painful or redundant.

The roots of “take it as read” lie in parliamentary procedure, the conduct of meetings governed by Robert’s Rules of Order and the like. It is common, for instance, for members of a group to accept the minutes of previous meetings “as read,” meaning without objection, or to approve a resolution as presented (“read”) to the group without modification or the debate that would ensue. The minutes of nearly every organization under the sun, to judge from a Google search, are riddled with the phrase “accepted as read” (“Dr. Fister moved that the August 4, 2006 minutes be accepted as read. Ms. LaVallee seconded the motion, and it passed unanimously,” Board of Dental Examiners, Augusta, Maine, 2006). In the slightly less formal form “take it as read,” the phrase then became a popular way to move a conversation swiftly past a bump in the road.

4 comments to Take it as read.

  • This limey was unsure of whether it was take it as red or read and I must have used it in conversation a 1,000 times – I exaggerate not.

    So thank you, word detective, for your insightful and amusing article.

    Hedgehogs taste better sans quills, my man…
    …and Dr. Fister & Ms. LaVallee – you’re making that up, surely? LaVallee Jabballee.

    Thanks again,
    Zebedeerox.

  • Indy

    Hey

    As a Limey who has just come across this –

    You have to cook them first, then they taste like chicken :)

    Cranky? Whose language is it anyway!!!!

  • Simon J Bonsor

    Elegantly and succintly done: no need for further debate.

    Unfortunately the hedgehog is in decline, so you probably wouldn’t find one to eat: if you do find one, please resist the urge to eat it….! (incidentally you wrap them in clay and roast them in an open fire: all the prickles then come off easily)
    [No I haven’t eaten one]

  • Iain

    I’ve used this phrase dozens of times as well, but was never quite sure whether it was spelt “red” or “read” – so thank you for the answer.

    The first paragraph of your answer had me in stitches: a perfect description of how us Brits can get all worked up about the usage of some obscure phrase. You’ve got us to a tee.

    But I warn you: diss the hedgehogs at your peril!!!

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