That sounds like “take a powder” might have meant “take a trip to the powder room” and “take a run-out powder” might have meant to take an especially hasty trip to the powder room. Gotta go!
KarenK:
June 16th, 2010 at 10:33 pm
Wisconsin is bordered by two Great Lakes; I’m sure they could get a sailing ship in there somehow.
Dora MacPherson:
August 27th, 2012 at 1:14 pm
I remember watching the old gangster movies with Lisbeth Scott. She would us the Phrase “he took a powder” with a straight face.
I thought it meant that he was shot and killed.
My logic was that some guns left a powder residue on the body.
I was sure on the wrong track.
So today I was thinking about it so I thought I would look it up.
The powder room one is funnier yet.
Linda B:
November 11th, 2013 at 3:39 am
You are all overthinking this expression. “Take a runout powder” means to excuse yourself to go to the powder room and then to quickly and secretly leave the building instead. Bette Davis said it to George Brent in the film, “Dark Victory.”
Donna:
May 20th, 2017 at 8:40 am
The term, “Take a powder,” comes from the 1929’s and refers to taking a headache powder. The compressed pill form of an aspirin came later. The idiom developed from suggesting that a person “take a powder” and go lie down morphed into “take a powder and go away” then to just “go away.”
Michael Izzo:
April 17th, 2019 at 12:49 am
I’m going to take a powder
merle grall:
December 9th, 2019 at 10:45 pm
I thought maybe it had to do with BC headache powder which is a very old product. It seems when I was young they used the phrase “take a powder” in their advertising so I thought maybe it just entered the language from that. Here’s one to ponder– where did the phrase “cut a chogie” come from? Haven’t heard that in many years.
Darren E:
April 15th, 2020 at 1:41 pm
I had to laugh when reading that a “mickey” or “Mickey Finn” was supposedly a ‘powerful laxative’! In the 20’s and 30’s the term Mickey Finn was similar (at least conceptually) with a “roofie”, “knock out drops” or a powerful sedative. The idea of slipping a powerful laxative into someone’s drink isn’t just funny, but also potentially pretty gross. I’ve seem old gangster movies that used a Mickey to overpower or disable a foe.
The theory that the origin of “take a powder” stems from taking headache powder makes much more sense than the others listed. I have heard ‘take a powder’ in reference to skiing, but it was as part of an advertising campaign for a ski resort during the 80’s.
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Steve Dunham:
June 14th, 2010 at 11:31 am
That sounds like “take a powder” might have meant “take a trip to the powder room” and “take a run-out powder” might have meant to take an especially hasty trip to the powder room. Gotta go!
KarenK:
June 16th, 2010 at 10:33 pm
Wisconsin is bordered by two Great Lakes; I’m sure they could get a sailing ship in there somehow.
Dora MacPherson:
August 27th, 2012 at 1:14 pm
I remember watching the old gangster movies with Lisbeth Scott. She would us the Phrase “he took a powder” with a straight face.
I thought it meant that he was shot and killed.
My logic was that some guns left a powder residue on the body.
I was sure on the wrong track.
So today I was thinking about it so I thought I would look it up.
The powder room one is funnier yet.
Linda B:
November 11th, 2013 at 3:39 am
You are all overthinking this expression. “Take a runout powder” means to excuse yourself to go to the powder room and then to quickly and secretly leave the building instead. Bette Davis said it to George Brent in the film, “Dark Victory.”
Donna:
May 20th, 2017 at 8:40 am
The term, “Take a powder,” comes from the 1929’s and refers to taking a headache powder. The compressed pill form of an aspirin came later. The idiom developed from suggesting that a person “take a powder” and go lie down morphed into “take a powder and go away” then to just “go away.”
Michael Izzo:
April 17th, 2019 at 12:49 am
I’m going to take a powder
merle grall:
December 9th, 2019 at 10:45 pm
I thought maybe it had to do with BC headache powder which is a very old product. It seems when I was young they used the phrase “take a powder” in their advertising so I thought maybe it just entered the language from that. Here’s one to ponder– where did the phrase “cut a chogie” come from? Haven’t heard that in many years.
Darren E:
April 15th, 2020 at 1:41 pm
I had to laugh when reading that a “mickey” or “Mickey Finn” was supposedly a ‘powerful laxative’! In the 20’s and 30’s the term Mickey Finn was similar (at least conceptually) with a “roofie”, “knock out drops” or a powerful sedative. The idea of slipping a powerful laxative into someone’s drink isn’t just funny, but also potentially pretty gross. I’ve seem old gangster movies that used a Mickey to overpower or disable a foe.
The theory that the origin of “take a powder” stems from taking headache powder makes much more sense than the others listed. I have heard ‘take a powder’ in reference to skiing, but it was as part of an advertising campaign for a ski resort during the 80’s.