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The meaning and origin of interesting English phrases

In a pig's eye

Meaning

An exclamation used to express strong disbelief, disagreement, or a sarcastic refusal.

Origin

Imagine the utter incredulity of a farmer being told something preposterous, their gaze perhaps falling upon the very livestock they tend. Emerging robustly in the 19th century, the phrase “in a pig’s eye” channels this deep-seated rural skepticism into a blunt, emphatic dismissal. It evokes the ludicrous image of someone scrutinizing a pig’s small, often muddy eye, desperately searching for truth, wisdom, or reliability—a perfectly futile endeavor that encapsulates absolute disbelief. The sheer impossibility of finding anything profound or trustworthy in a pig’s gaze became a vivid, if impolite, shorthand for expressing utter incredulity, quickly establishing itself as a punchy, no-nonsense retort in the vernacular.

Examples

  • You think I'm going to lend you more money after you never paid me back last time? In a pig's eye!
  • He claimed he could finish the entire project by tomorrow, but in a pig's eye will that ever happen.
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