blue peter

See also: Blue Peter

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

The flag, serving as a signal of recall for departure, was used by the British Navy from 1777, and the name “blue peter” had become common by the end of the 18th century.[1] An all-blue flag had earlier seen use for the same purpose by the Dutch East India Company. While “blue” obviously refers to the dominant colour of the flag, the origin of the second part of the term, “peter”, is unknown. Often said to be a corruption of “blue repeater”, there is actually no signal flag that goes by that designation. The use of the flag to spell the letter “P” dates from 1857 and so cannot have played a role in the origin of the term.

The whist play, introduced by Lord Henry Bentinck, was named by him after the flag.[2]

Noun

blue peter (plural blue peters)Category:English lemmas#BLUEPETERCategory:English nouns#BLUEPETERCategory:English countable nouns#BLUEPETERCategory:English multiword terms#BLUEPETERCategory:English entries with incorrect language header#BLUEPETERCategory:Pages with entries#BLUE%20PETERCategory:Pages with 1 entry#BLUE%20PETER

  1. (nauticalCategory:en:Nautical#BLUEPETER) A blue signal flag with a white rectangle in the centre, signifying "P". When flown alone, indicates that a ship is ready to sail, requiring all crew members and passengers to return on board.
  2. (card gamesCategory:en:Card games#BLUEPETER, intransitiveCategory:English intransitive verbs#BLUEPETER) In whist, a play that calls for trumps by throwing away a higher card of a suit while holding a lower one.

Translations

Verb

blue peter (third-person singular simple present blue peters, present participle blue petering, simple past and past participle blue petered)Category:English lemmas#BLUEPETERCategory:English verbs#BLUEPETERCategory:English multiword terms#BLUEPETERCategory:English entries with incorrect language header#BLUEPETERCategory:Pages with entries#BLUE%20PETERCategory:Pages with 1 entry#BLUE%20PETER

  1. (card gamesCategory:en:Card games#BLUEPETER, intransitiveCategory:English intransitive verbs#BLUEPETER) In whist, to play a blue peter.

References

  1. William P. Mack (1980), Naval Ceremonies, Customs, and Traditions, Naval Institute Press, →ISBN, page 232
  2. Alan Truscott; Dorothy Truscott (2004), The New York Times Bridge Book, Macmillan, →ISBN, pages 4–5

Further reading

Category:en:Flags#BLUEPETERCategory:en:Rallids#BLUEPETER
Category:English countable nouns Category:English intransitive verbs Category:English lemmas Category:English multiword terms Category:English nouns Category:English terms with quotations Category:English verbs Category:Entries with translation boxes Category:Pages with 1 entry Category:Pages with entries Category:Quotation templates to be cleaned Category:Terms with French translations Category:en:Card games Category:en:Flags Category:en:Nautical Category:en:Rallids