Does anyone know a caboodle is, and why it includes everything not included in the original kit?
Once in a while you can get shown the light
in the strangest of places
if you look at it right…
Does anyone know a caboodle is, and why it includes everything not included in the original kit?
Once in a while you can get shown the light
in the strangest of places
if you look at it right…
The best definition I can think of for caboodle is “the lot of it” or the whole mess. In other words “the whole kit and caboodle” means pretty much the same as just “caboodle”. Kinda the way “Everybody and their grandmother” means the same as just “Everybody”.
Wasn’t Kitten Kaboodle a stripper in the 50’s?
TT
“It is better to know some of the questions than all of the answers.”
–James Thurber
And from Random House:
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Kit and caboodle is simply a set phrase made up of two words that are both rare when used independently of each other. Kit is the same word as the one meaning ‘a set of items for a specific purpose’ (as in “tool kit”), but in this phrase is used broadly to mean ‘a group of persons or things’. Caboodle is the word “boodle” meaning ‘a lot; pack; crowd; large quantity’, with a variant of the intensive prefix “ker-” (as in kerplunk or gazillion–the prefix appears in many forms). The entire phrase the whole kit and caboodle, as it usually appears, is therefore rather redundant.
This use of a set phrase whose elements are individually unfamiliar (and are often synonyms) has many parallels in English. One example is time and tide, “tide” being an archaic word for ‘time’; another is the legal phrase without let or hindrance.
Caboodle is first found in the mid-nineteenth century and is now rarely found alone. The phrase kit and caboodle is first found later in the nineteenth century. Both are Americanisms.
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“The dawn of a new era is felt and not measured.” Walter Lord