Gambling in medieval France was a simple business. All you needed were some friends, a pot, and a chicken. In fact, you didn’t need friends – you could do this with your enemies – but the pot and the chicken were essential.
First, each person puts an equal amount of money in the pot. Nobody should on any account make a joke about a poultry sum. Shoo the chicken away to a reasonable distance. What’s a reasonable distance? About a stone’s throw.
Next, pick up a stone.
Now, you all take turns hurling stones at that poor bird, which will squawk and flap and run about. The first person to hit the chicken wins all the money in the pot. You then agree never to mention any of this to an animal rights campaigner.
That’s how the French played a game of chicken. The French, though, being French, called it a game of poule, which is French for chicken. And the chap who had won all the money had therefore won the jeu de poule.
The term got transferred to other things. At card games, the pot of money in the middle of the table came to be known as the poule. English gamblers picked the term up and brought it back with them in the seventeenth century. They changed the spelling to pool, but they still had a pool of money in the middle of the table.
It should be noted that this pool of money has absolutely nothing to do with a body of water. Swimming pools, rock pools and Liverpools are utterly different things.
Back to gambling. When billiards became a popular sport, people started to gamble on it, and this variation was known as pool, hence shooting pool.
cockbeard wrote:I like that, apart from the bit about swimming pools, rock pools, and liverpools being different. I'm pretty sure they are all small bodies of water.
Andy wrote:I think it would be especially cruel to have a placename that its own occupants can’t pronounce.
SpaceGazelle wrote:The closest planet to Earth, on average, is Mercury
GooberTheHat wrote:I don't believe that.
Diluted Dante wrote:GooberTheHat wrote:I don't believe that.
It includes the firing into the air in celebration after the kill.
The Department of Defense's increased requirements for small- and medium-calibre ammunitions have largely been driven by increased weapons training requirements
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