Kris Spisak

Writing Tip 435: How many sheets to the wind?

How many sheets to the wind - windmills - sea
And while we’re talking about the expression, what’s the origin of it anyway?

Are you imagining laundry hanging up to dry or a bit too much of a celebration? Or if you know where I’m going, here’s your next question: how many sheets to the wind are we talking about?

In 1737, Benjamin Franklin published The Drinker’s Dictionary, a list of 228 “round-about phrases” to describe drunkenness. (More on that coming soon). Admittedly, no version of “sheets to the wind” or “sheets in the wind” (a possible older version) appeared on this list, but as you know (or might have guessed by this point), we’re talking about one more colorful expression to describe one who has imbibed too much alcohol.

Why do we need so many words and phrases? (A 2009 publication on the same subject included nearly 3,000 possibilities!) Well, to quote Franklin:

“Mankind naturally and universally approve Virtue in their Hearts, and detest Vice; and therefore, whenever thro’ Temptation they fall into a Practice of the latter, they would if possible conceal it from themselves as well as others, under some other Name than that which properly belongs to it.”

So, sure. Drunk. Sloshed. Wasted. Or, two of my favorites from Franklin’s list, “clipping the King’s English” or “contending with the pharaoh.” Maybe, as Franklin suggests, we have these words because reaching such a state is a shameful vice worth covering up. But whether you agree with this assessment or not, let’s get back to those sheets.

The expression for drunk is “three sheets to the wind” (most commonly).

Wait, most commonly?

Indeed.

Some argue the number “three” is a part of a scale, where one sheet to the wind is a bit tipsy, and four is losing consciousness. Three then, according to this scale, is wildly, flailingly drunk. Or perhaps “nimptopsical” to quote Franklin again.

So, now you know: in modern usage, the expression is “three sheets to the wind.”

But wait, there’s more.

Beyond adding another possibility to the profusion of synonyms for “drunk,” this isn’t the end of our conversation, because, of course, one might wonder about these sheets and their origin.

First things first, we’re not talking about laundry on the line, so we can take that off the list; however, there are two possible origin stories for “three sheets in the wind”—both of which are solid contenders. There might even be a connection between the two.

The most likely “three sheets to the wind” etymology story comes from either the idea that:

or

So windmills? Another nautical origin story? Both have their claims and their defenders, and personally, I’m going to keep digging. But what we do know in the end of all of this is that the magic number is three.

“Three sheets to the wind” is the expression you’re looking for. Not ten. Not twenty. Those guesses miss the mark. If they’re quoted to you by someone who’s had too much to drink, that’s one thing; however, now you, at least, know better.

Cheers!


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