In the French Revolutionary calendar, today is BĂȘche
(Day of the Spade). Given the nature of the French Revolutionary
calendar, celebrating plants, animals and tools, we must be talking
here about the garden implements rather than the Playing card suit.
So here are 10 facts about spades.

The
word comes from the Old English "spadu", which, like
similar words in other languages, meant a digging implement.
Before
the advent of metalworking, people used spades made from riven wood
or the shoulder blades of animals.
Parts
of a spade are the metal blade, which is sometimes referred to as
the spit, the shaft shaft, which is usually made of wood, and a
handle.
Is
it a spade or a shovel? The words are often used interchangeably but
a spade and a shovel are actually two different things, with
different uses. Spades are usually straight and push force directly
down, making them good for digging, while a shovel often has a
curved or scooped blade, because its function is to move stuff
around, like Snow or sand or loose dirt.
Hence,
when you’re at the seaside and buy a bucket and spade, you are
actually buying a bucket and shovel. In North America, these are
called shovels with pails.
Spade
blades were used as currency in ancient China.
Some Ice cream scoops are also called spades, because of their shape.
The
English expression, to call a spade a spade means saying something
“as it is”, speaking directly and often to the point of
rudeness. The expression ultimately comes from a line in a work in
ancient Greece by Plutarch. Who actually said "calling a Fig a
fig, and a trough a trough". It’s thought this expression in
itself was made up of double entendres and therefore quite rude.
Later, Erasmus translated Plutarch’s text and it was he who
altered it to be about spades. It’s thought it was a deliberate
choice for dramatic effect rather than a mistake in translation.
Nicholas Udall translated Erasmus in 1542 and the phrase entered the
English language, and was used by many famous writers including Charles Dickens, W Somerset Maugham, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Robert Browning, Jonathan Swift, and Oscar Wilde.
The
phrase has also been seen as borderline racist, as in the late 1920s
“spade” became an insulting term for a black person.
Spades
today usually have footrests on both sides of the blade so both left
and right footed people can use the same tool. This wasn’t always
the case, however. Traditionally, a spade only had a footrest on one
side. This was notably the case in rural Ireland. In due course, the
English introduced spades with two footrests to the north of Ireland
while farmers in the south retained the old type. This is the origin
of a slur which you may have heard on Downton Abbey: the
Protestants in the North would say that a person “dug with the
wrong foot” or was “left-footer” meaning a Catholic person who
still used the old style of spade.
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