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  1. What's the origin of the phrase 'Jerry built'? The phrases ‘jerry built’/’jerry building’/’jerry builder’ have been around since at least 1869, when ‘jerry built’ was defined in the Lonsdale Glossary: “Jerry-built, slightly, or unsubstantially built.”.

  2. Jul 6, 2017 · Jerry-built referred to poor houses or buildings made of the cheapest, most inferior materials, these were speculative builders who often had very little or no experience. It was common that the structures had no foundations and their sewer pipes led nowhere.

  3. Feb 13, 2022 · Liverpool (Lancashire, north-western England), 1833—a speculating builder who constructs cheap houses, flats, etc., with materials of poor quality, for a quick profit—the origin of the element ‘jerry’ is unknown.

  4. Badly or hastily built with materials of poor quality. The term is mid 19th century, and is sometimes said to be from the name of a firm of builders in Liverpool, or to allude to the walls of Jericho, which fell down at the sound of Joshua's trumpets.

  5. Jerry-built came along in the 19th century to mean 'built cheaply and unsubstantially.' Jerry-rigged is the newest, meaning 'organized or constructed in a crude or improvised manner.' All three are established terms.

  6. The earliest known use of the adjective jerry-built is in the 1860s. OED's earliest evidence for jerry-built is from 1869, in a glossary by John C. Atkinson, author and antiquary. jerry-built is formed within English, by compounding.

  7. Jun 16, 2000 · Jerry-built, and jury-built and jury-rigged are all related to something erected in slapdash fashion, or in reponse to an emergency using improvised materials. Human beings being human beings, we cannot abide the notion of an unexplained etymology, so we invent them, as in the WWII example.

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