- handicap
- [17] The word handicap originally
denoted a sort of game of chance in which one
person put up one of his or her personal
possessions against an article belonging to
someone else (for example one might match a
gold watch against the other’s horse) and an
umpire was appointed to adjudicate on the
respective values of the articles. All three parties
put their hands into a hat, together with a wager,
and on hearing the umpire’s verdict the two
opponents had to withdraw them in such a way
as to indicate whether they wished to proceed
with the game. If they agreed, either in favour of
proceeding or against, the umpire took the
money; but if they disagreed, the one who
wanted to proceed took it. It was the concealing
of the hands in the hat that gave the game its
name hand in cap, hand i’ cap, source of modern
English handicap.
In the 18th century the same term was applied
to a sort of horse race between two horses, in
which an umpire decided on a weight
disadvantage to be imposed on a superior horse
and again the owners of the horses signalled
their assent to or dissent from his adjudication by
the way in which they withdrew their hands from
a hat. Such a race became known as a handicap
race, and in the 19th century the term handicap
first broadened out to any contest in which
inequalities are artificially evened out, and was
eventually transferred to the ‘disadvantage’
imposed on superior contestants – whence the
main modern meaning, ‘disadvantage,
disability’.
* * *The present word for a disadvantage or a specially weighted contest was originally used for a type of lottery. Hence its origin in the phrase hand in cap, referring to the drawing of forfeits from a cap or the depositing of money in one.
The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins. 2013.