Join the colours

來源: 2025-08-03 08:13:18 [博客] [舊帖] [給我悄悄話] 本文已被閱讀:

Meaning: Enlist in the army.

 

Background:

   Each regiment in the British Army has a flag, called its `colour'. This dates

   back to at least the 16th century. In this citation from Certain discourses

   concerning the forms and effects of divers sorts of weapons, and other verie

   important matters militarie, 1590, Sir John Smythe appears to be disparaging

   about what must then have been new practice of calling an ensign (flag) a

   colour:

 

     "Colours is by them so fondlie & ignorantly given, as if they should (in

     stead of Ensignes) be asked how manie Colours of footmen there were in the

     Armie."

 

   The word `colour' in this context is now best remembered via the annual

   ceremony in London of `Trooping the Colour', in which various regiments of

   the British Army, notably the Household Division, parade their regimental

   colours before the monarch.

 

- www.phrases.org.uk [edited]

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The Manchus that conquered China in the early 1600s were called the bannermen

under eight military regiments, each dubbed a flag: plain white, bordered white,

plain blue, bordered blue, etc. I don't imagine it easy for the masses in those

days to just sign up, however, as bannermen were a higher social class, like the

samurai in Japan. Joining the colours would've been a promotion, a coveted

honor.

 

80 years after the dynasty, a college buddy was still proud of his bordered

yellow toff heritage. The eldest son of a well-to-do family in the capital, he

was tall, handsome, smart, brawny, generous, true-blue, let in first by the

party, had a graphic memory for fighter jets and aircraft carriers, and dated

the hottest girls. We hated his guts!