- Akimbo
"Akimbo" is a human body position in which the
hand s are on the hips and the elbows are bowed outward, or bent/bowed in a more general sense Fact|date=September 2007 (e.g. "the sailor sat with his legs akimbo").Origins
The word's origins are murky. The term originated from the English around 1400 in "
The Tale of Beryn ": "The hoost ... set his hond in kenebowe." In the 17th century, the word was spelled "on kenbow", "a kenbow", "a kenbol", "a kenbold", or "on kimbow". The forms "akembo" and "akimbo" are found in the 18th century, with "akimbo" gradually becoming the standard.One suggestion is that it comes from the Icelandic word "keng-boginn", "crooked", but there is no evidence that "keng-boginn" ever meant anything other than "crooked", or that "akimbo" ever meant simply "crooked". Also, if this theory of the origin of "akimbo" is correct, there should be an earlier English form such as *"keng-bow", but no such word exists.
Other suggestions trace akimbo to another
Middle English word, "cambok", "a curved stick or staff" (fromMedieval Latin "cambuca") or to "a cam bow", "in a crooked bow". However, there is no extant form of "akimbo" spelled with "cam"; and the earliest form of the word, "kenebowe", is a long way from "cam". The "bo" part of the word is presumably related to "bow", but no connection has ever been documented.The "
Middle English Dictionary ", with some noted uncertainty, proposes that "akimbo" might be related toOld French "chane" or "kane" "pot" or "jug" respectively, combined with Middle English "boue", "bow". In that case, the word "akimbo" originally meant "bent like the handle of a jug"; however, there is no evidence for this, either.Until recent times (the 1980s or thereabouts), the term was almost exclusively "arms akimbo", with little involvement of the legs; it seems that it was first creatively used to describe sitting cross-legged. More recently, the term has been adapted still further, giving a second sense of limbs being splayed out rather than merely bent.
In the late 1990s and 2000s, the word was adopted into
computer gaming , where the meaning was modified until it referred to thedual wield ing of two weapons. For example, in afirst person shooter game, the player might choose a "pistols akimbo" option to wield one gun in each hand.During the 1990s the phrase gained comic notoriety in the UK when comics
The League of Gentlemen used it for the name of a children's educational theatre company, Legs Akimbo.ee also
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Dual wield References
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