Homonym warning

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I've run across a particular error in a number of stories here recently.

People are writing about having been "put through the ringer".

That's wrong. It's "put through the *wringer*". A wringer was a gizmo on early washing machines where you used a crank to turn a pair of rollers which you fed wet clothing between. They'd squeeze out the water.

Getting a finger caught in one was rather painful for obvious reasons.

These days you find wringers on some industrial type mop buckets.

Related words phrases:

"wrung out" (what something/someone is like after going through the wringer)(see also note farther along)

"Wringing wet" (from the state of clothes before you fed them into the wringer. Not quite dripping wet, but definitely very soaked)

"wrung his hands" (twisting the hands together)

There's also an old technical term "wrung joint" which was where you fastened pieces of metal together by having tabs on one piece fit through slots in another and then twisted 90 degrees so they won't go back through. I last saw wrung joints on metal toys back in the 1960s.

Wringing your hands goes back before the mechanical wringer. Back then you wrung out clothes and other cloth items by twisting them really hard which forced out the water.

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