Question!!

Canada
January 5, 2007 3:05pm CST
Can anyone give me a definition for 'Passing the buck' Its not in my book and I dont know what it means.. x_X
1 person likes this
5 responses
• United States
5 Jan 07
for instance, If you had something and gave it to someone else then you could say that you passed on the buck. This figure of speech can be used on just about anything that has to do with passing something on. It is usually reffered to when somone owns a company and gives it to there child
@AskAlly (3625)
• Canada
5 Jan 07
I always thought it meant passing blame on to another person.
@ESKARENA1 (18261)
5 Jan 07
i was taught that this came from froteer America where the only time the ppor rough fronteers men had money was by robbing either pay trains or banks, if they were caught with money they were guilty, so by passing the money on the guy caught with it was guilty, passing the buck in other words
@volschenkh (1043)
• South Africa
5 Jan 07
From the WWW: http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/pass-the-buck.html Meaning Pass responsibility on to someone else. Origin Look up buck in the dictionary and you'll find a couple of dozen assorted nouns, verbs and adjectives. The most common use of the word these days is as the slang term for the American dollar. That's not the buck meant here though. Look a little further down the list and you'll find 'buck - an article used in a game of poker', and that's the buck that's passed. Poker became very popular in America during the second half of the 19th century. Players were highly suspicious of cheating or any form of bias and there's considerable folklore depicting gunslingers in shoot-outs based on accusations of dirty dealing. In order to avoid unfairness the deal changed hands during sessions. The person who was next in line to deal would be given a marker. This was often a knife, and knives often had handles made of buck's horn - hence the marker becoming known as a buck. When the dealer's turn was done he 'passed the buck'. Silver dollars were later used as markers and this is probably the origin of the use of buck as a slang term for dollar. The earliest citation of the phrase in print is from the Weekly New Mexican, July 1865: "They draw at the commissary, and at poker after they have passed the buck.". This is clearly around the time that the phrase was coined as there are many such references in the following years. The best-known use of buck in this context is 'the buck stops here', which is the promise made by US president Harry S. Truman, and which he kept prominent in his own and his elector's minds by putting it on a sign on his desk.
@Shaun72 (15959)
• Palatka, Florida
5 Jan 07
Passing something that you don't want to do on to someone else.