Wordxplr

The meaning and origin of interesting English phrases

Lose your marbles

Meaning

To become mentally confused, irrational, or insane.

Origin

The phrase 'lose your marbles' vividly conjures the image of a child's collection of small, colorful glass spheres scattering and vanishing, leaving nothing behind. In the 19th century, playing with marbles was a hugely popular pastime, and a child's marbles represented not just their toys but often their prized possessions, sometimes even their currency in playground games. To 'lose your marbles' literally meant to lose these valuable objects, signifying a loss of one's faculties or possessions. This simple, tangible loss of small, round objects—representing order and mental capacity—metaphorically evolved to describe a profound mental disarray, as if one's very thoughts and reason had rolled away, irretrievably lost.

Examples

  • After working 80 hours a week for months without a break, I truly felt like I was going to lose my marbles.
  • My eccentric aunt has started to lose her marbles a bit, sometimes forgetting where she's placed her keys moments after putting them down.
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