{"id":13538,"date":"2022-05-30T06:00:00","date_gmt":"2022-05-30T11:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/plainenglish.com\/expressions\/egg-on\/"},"modified":"2024-11-20T23:13:42","modified_gmt":"2024-11-21T05:13:42","slug":"egg-on","status":"publish","type":"expressions","link":"https:\/\/plainenglish.com\/expressions\/egg-on\/","title":{"rendered":"Egg on"},"content":{"rendered":"
Today’s expression is “egg on.” This is a funny expression; don’t ask me why it means what it does. Like I said before, it has nothing to do with eggs. To egg someone on is to encourage someone to do something that’s either wrong, foolish <\/span>, or not in their best interest.<\/p>\n Think back to when you were a kid, think about the kids at your school. There were always the kids who were willing to <\/span> break the rules. And then there were the kids who egged them on. Those were the ones\u2014and you know who I’m talking about\u2014they didn’t break the rules themselves, no, no, no, never. But they encouraged the others to break the rules. They egged other kids on.<\/p>\n They said things like, “Hey wouldn’t it be funny if someone threw <\/span> a French fry across the cafeteria <\/span>?” And then sure enough someone else would go and do it! The first kid who makes the suggestion is egging the other kids on. He’s encouraging the bad behavior <\/span>.<\/p>\n Kids don’t know it at the time, but teachers are wise to this <\/span>. The teachers understand there are innocent-looking kids <\/span> who never break the rules but are nonetheless <\/span> egging other kids on. So teachers will sometimes intervene <\/span>, and they’ll look at the smiling, innocent looking kids and they’ll say, “Don’t egg him on.” That means, “don’t encourage him to misbehave <\/span>.”<\/p>\n I say “him,” of course girls can egg one another on, too. It’s just the girls are a little less obvious about their rule-breaking, at least that’s the way I remember it!<\/p>\n Now fast-forward <\/span> 15 years, the kids on the playground <\/span> are now online shoppers. And they get to the checkout page and they see a big number\u2026gosh, I didn’t realize all these clothes cost so much, they might think. And then they remember their friendly influencer buddies <\/span> on TikTok had a great suggestion: just buy now, pay later<\/a> ! It makes the whole thing cheaper!<\/p>\n The influencers make money when their followers buy stuff, so the influencers want you to spend, spend, spend. And so they egg their followers on by saying, “hey, if you can’t afford this, just buy now, pay later.” They encourage the bad behavior. <\/p>\n There is no economic rationale <\/span> to borrow money to buy makeup or clothing. That is a bad habit. The influencers don’t care. It’s not like they have to pay the bills; it’s not like it’s their credit that will get ruined <\/span>. So they egg people on and say, your wardrobe is out of date <\/span>, you need to replace every single piece of clothing you own, and if it seems expensive, well just buy now, pay later. They encourage bad behavior; they’re egging people on.<\/p>\n