Square peg in a round hole explained

"Square peg in a round hole" is an idiomatic expression which describes the unusualindividualist who could not fit into a niche of their society.[1]

The metaphor was originated by Sydney Smith in "On the Conduct of the Understanding", one of a series of lectures on moral philosophy that he delivered at the Royal Institution in 1804–06:

The Oxford English Dictionary has as its earliest citation Albany Fonblanque, England under Seven Administrations, 1837, "Sir Robert Peel was a smooth round peg, in a sharp-cornered square hole, and Lord Lyndenurst is a rectangular square-cut peg, in a smooth round hole."

English literature

The British novelist Edward Bulwer-Lytton published the metaphor in a late 19th-century book:

Music

"A Square Peg in a Round Hole" is the title song of the 1959 British war comedy film The Square Peg starring Norman Wisdom."Square Peg in a Round Hole" is also the name of an album by Apparatjik.

Godley and Creme in their title "Wedding Bells" (1981) are singing:"I'm like a square peg in a round holeI don't belong here babydon't need a fanfare or a drum rollto tell you babyI don't belong to you baby"

Business management

This idiomatic expression has proven to be quite durable into the 21st century. It is used in a range of contemporary business-related circumstances; and illustrative examples include:

"As they say, you can't fit a square peg in a round hole. If your boss is like that round hole and you are that square peg, you aren't going to fit in unless you re-shape your edges."

-- Gini Graham Scott in A Survival Guide for Working with Bad Bosses: Dealing with Bullies, Idiots, Back-stabbers, and Other Managers from Hell (2005).[2]

Visual meaning

The idiomatic expression conjures a visual image, and this is evolving independently, e.g.,

Similar expressions

Sejong the Great of Korea commented, in 1443, that using Chinese characters for Korean was “like trying to fit a square handle into a round hole”.[5] He subsequently developed the Hangul phonetic alphabet.

There is a Chinese idiom "方枘圆凿", or "方凿圆枘", (literally and respectively "square tenon and round mortise" and "square mortise and round tenon") that was originally derived from a line in the Verses of Chu (Chu ci) 楚辭), composed in the Warring States period (ended 221 BC), in which the poet Song Yu writes: "圆凿而方枘兮,吾固知其龃龉而难入。" The Han Dynasty historian Sima Qian and Tang Dynasty historian 司馬貞 used the same expression in their historical writings too.[6] [7] It is still widely used today to mean two things that don't fit together due to different qualities, characters or abilities.

Literal cases

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Wallace, Irving. (1957) The Square Pegs: Some Americans Who Dared to be Different, p. 10.
  2. Scott, Gini Graham. (2005). A Survival Guide for Working with Bad Bosses: Dealing with Bullies, Idiots, Back-stabbers, and Other Managers from Hell, p. 153.
  3. [Dore Gold|Gold, Dore]
  4. http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=108_senate_hearings&docid=f:91382.pdf Square peg in a round hole? Disease management in traditional Medicare.
  5. The Economist. (2013). The Economist Explains: How was Hangul invented?
  6. 司馬遷.史記.卷七十四.孟子荀卿傳:「持方枘欲內圜鑿,其能入乎?」
  7. 司馬貞.索隱:「謂戰國之時,仲尼、孟軻以仁義干世主,猶方枘圜鑿然。」
  8. Web site: The Tree Nail in Timber Framing of the Past . Fitchen, John . Spring 1990 . The Dutch Barn Preservation Society - Newsletter, Volume 3, Issue 1 . February 28, 2016 .
  9. Web site: Interior View of the Apollo 13 Lunar Module and the 'Mailbox' . Great Images in NASA (GRIN) . NASA . April 14, 1970 . NASA photo ID: AS13-62-8929; GRIN DataBase Number: GPN-2002-000056 . July 3, 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120301123005/http://grin.hq.nasa.gov/ABSTRACTS/GPN-2002-000056.html . March 1, 2012.