Have you ever wondered,,,,,????

sykokat

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Whilst picking Beanies feet out this morning and making sure all was well, I looked at her frog and thought to myself...'looks nothing like a frog!':eek:
I mean, where DID that name for it come from?? Why not the toad??
Chestnuts???? What's that all about??
And 'docks'!! Isn't that somewhere you park ya boat????:confused:
 
Some people think the horse's frog is named that because it resembles, in shape and texture, the amphibian. They are both roughly triangular and slightly squishy.


However, there's also a story -- true or not-- that relates the two.

In the 1800's in Scotland there was a club called Society of the Horseman's Word. Horse trainers, blacksmiths, and other horseman would join to learn horsemanship skills. Elder members of this masonic-like society were reputed to have supernormal abilities to understand and control horses. Apparently this Scottish club was only one of several such societies during this time (for horsemen and people with other interests).


Supposedly the society passed down from horseman to horseman a secret word or phrase that would control horses... a word that, when spoken to a horse, would instantly make him follow every comand or wish. There was a demand for those that knew the Word. Such an individual could make a wild horse calm and manageable, or a stubborn horse agreable.


These "horse whisperers" as they were called practiced both horsemanship and witchcraft. Initiation ceremonies included reading passages from the Bible backwards in order to summon the devil. Passwords, handshakes, and salutes were used to keep their rituals and practices secret.
They carried talismans and charms for good luck, and used oils and scents to influence horses. They would use a strong scent to 'jade' a horse, or make it refuse to move. Other oils and herbs would do the opposite, and restore the horse back to normal or have a calming influence on the horse. For this reason, they were also called 'horse-witches'.

One of the most important charms that they carried was a bone of a frog or toad. Part of the initiation ceremony required novices to kill a toad, and leave it on a whitethorn bush for 24 hours to dry. Then, the toad was put in an anthill and left for a month, so the ants would eat everything off but the bones. It was removed from the anthill and tossed into a running stream during a full moon. The horseman would watch the bones come apart in the water until the pelvis bone floated free (it's said to have floated upstream against the current). This bone is very similar in shape to the horse's frog. It was kept by the horseman and supposedly used to bewitch or control horses.

This, then, could be the reason that part of the horse's hoof is named after a frog; this almost forgotten society with its bizarre rituals is the only link I can find that relates the two.

/\ what google tells me! quite an interesting read ;)
 
thats good question!! i hvae no idea maybe some weird person thought theres a squashe frog stuck in his foot and called it a frog???
 
I would guess that a lot of words for horses have come from VERY old English which can be quite close to modern Flemish/Dutch.

So, I have investigated with the aid of all-knowing Google translator...........

With my excellent french skills :D, I know that the frog for a "frog" (see what I did there? Little bit of xenophobia :D) is “forchette” or “fork”. Just plugged “fork” into Google to translate into Dutch (no Dutch skills whatsoever) and got “vork”.

Now, I'm thinking that “vork” said in a certain accent over a few years may well morph into “frog”.? Love the Charleysummer explanation though.

Funny that the “V” on bricks is a “frog” aswell but that probably comes from the horse hoof connection.

Best go away and get on with some work now...................
 
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