Why do we call them coppers?

My twelve year old son has just asked me why we call policemen, coppers. Now he is too young for me to tell him what I really call them but the only polite thing that I could come up with is;- :blush:

Constable
Of
Police.

Does anyone know?

Ladytrucker679:
My twelve year old son has just asked me why we call policemen, coppers. Now he is too young for me to tell him what I really call them but the only polite thing that I could come up with is;- :blush:

Constable
Of
Police.

Does anyone know?

When you get caught doing something you shouldnā€™t you get ā€œcoppedā€; thatā€™s where it comes from. Donā€™t ask me about Plod, Fuzz or Pigs thoughā€¦ :confused:

Well, I do know that ā€˜Bobbiesā€™ comes from Sir Robert Peelā€™ who started the first police force.

theyā€™ve been called pigs in london since the early 1800ā€™s something to do with a street near bow street i think, theyā€™ve always been known as peelers or bobbies.
i think coppers started from copying the 30ā€™s gangster movies, coppers in britain has always been small change.

Thankā€™s everybody, I knew you lot would know. :laughing:

I think that the the slang for the police ā€˜copperā€™ comes from cockney rhyming slang. Coppers = Grasshoppers, and hence the terms of ā€˜copshopā€™ or ā€˜grass shopā€™, directly deriving from ā€˜Bottles and Stoppersā€™ (coppers) and then the term ā€˜grassā€™ deriving from the slang for someone who grasses someone else up etc.

Is cockney derived from Englishā– ā– ? :question:

Que? :laughing:

they are called that cos theyre 2 a pennyā€¦ :sunglasses: ā€¦derives from the olden days of cockney rhyming slangā€¦grass hoppersā€¦coppersā€¦to tell on someoneā€¦
have a nice day

According to the Merriam Webster Dictionary:

Around the year 1700, the slang verb cop entered English usage, meaning ā€œto get ahold of, catch, capture.ā€ By 1844, cop showed up in print, and soon thereafter the -er suffix was added, and a policeman became a copper, one who cops or catches and arrests criminals. Copper first appeared in print in 1846, the use of cop as a short form copper occured in 1859.

Hereā€™s a siteā€¦

ask.yahoo.com/ask/20000315.html

What can I say (Kate and) everybody Thank you! :laughing:

OKā€¦ I gone and done me research now! :laughing: The first Corn Laws were introduced in 1815 in order to ptotect the interests of wealthy landowners in England so to protect the price of home grown wheat after the Napoleonic wars. Irish farmers could not grow wheat because of the peaty soil and ā€˜The Irish Potatoā€™ famine took place. Robert Peel was Sec of State for Ireland, and he tried to quell the growing unrest in Ireland, by forming a sort of Poilice force but he failed.
In 1822 he became Home Sec and he greatly reformed the penal sytem, but because of growing civil unrest about the price of wheat, he introduced The Metropolitan Police Act. Peel merely expanded on the idea of The Bow Street Runners who had been formed in about 1750, an ununiforned group of runners that went out looking for suspects for Bow Street Magistrates Court.
True Cockneys are said to born in the sound of Bow Bells and this is supposed to be the heart of the ā€˜Eastendā€™ The Cockneys were fearful of the new Peelers or Bobbies on their streets. The Eastend was a slum where the common folk lived, and they took umbridge at the fact that the ā€˜beakā€™ were so visible, so they started to use codes with each other when they thought that the police were in the vicinity, and from there sprung cockney rhyming slang.
As I have said before, the term ā€˜copperā€™ in its widest sense, derives from the old cockney rhyming slang. BOTTLE STOPPER = copper or GRASSHOPPER = copper. The term ā€˜Grassā€™ is probably a direct link to the slang of grasshopper (someone who tells tales) as Truckyboy has pointed out, and the fact that they used the term ā€˜Copperā€™ in the first place because, as Kate has already pointed out (well researched Kate) that ā€˜copā€™ was an expression meaning to ā€˜catchā€™ Therefore they probably took a common word of their time, and rhymed it up!

Phew! Pmsl :laughing:

Wow! :open_mouth: :open_mouth: :open_mouth: :open_mouth: :open_mouth:
That is so cool thank you. :wink: :laughing:

A really good posting ladytruckerā€¦ I learnt something out of that! Good for you for asking the question! :slight_smile:

I am amazed at the effort everybody went to with their responseā€™s and I will be showing my son when he comes again, he will be thrilled thankā€™s. :laughing:

THEYā€™RE STILL [ZBā€™S] THOUGH :laughing:

Rob K:
THEYā€™RE STILL [ZBā€™S] THOUGH :laughing:

Thatā€™s why I couldnā€™t answer my son! :laughing: :laughing: :laughing: :laughing:

Does that apply to the bosses wife too Robā– ā– ?

:exclamation: :exclamation: :exclamation:

Ladytrucker679:

Rob K:
THEYā€™RE STILL [ZBā€™S] THOUGH :laughing:

Thatā€™s why I couldnā€™t answer my son! :laughing: :laughing: :laughing: :laughing:

what a surprise,didnā€™t expect anything less from you rob :laughing: