canard

views updated May 29 2018

canard an unfounded rumour or story. Recorded from the mid 19th century, the word comes from French, literally ‘duck’, also ‘hoax’, from Old French caner ‘to quack’. One suggested origin is the expression vendre un canard à moitié ‘half-sell a duck’, with the implication that a half-sale is no sale at all, and therefore the vendor has been fooled. Alternatively, the expression has been attributed to a made-up story about ducks, which was believed by many, and came to exemplify public credulity.

Le Canard Enchané (‘The Chained Duck’) is the title of a famous French satirical weekly newspaper, founded in 1916.

canard

views updated May 18 2018

ca·nard / kəˈnär(d)/ • n. 1. an unfounded rumor or story.2. a small winglike projection attached to an aircraft forward of the main wing to provide extra stability or control, sometimes replacing the tail.

canard

views updated May 23 2018

canard cock-and-bull story. XIX. — F., lit. ‘duck’; the sense of ‘hoax’ is said to have arisen from the phr. vendre un canard à moitié ‘half-sell a duck’.

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