Learn English – the origin of “crash at someone’s place”

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I know it’s slang.
But help me to find origin of crash at someone’s place

Best Answer

According to Green’s Dictionary of Slang “crash at/with” is a variant of “crash (out)” meaning to sleep, to collapse exhausted (1945) originally from the RN slang expression “crash the swede.”

crash (out) v. (originally from Royal Navy slang crash the swede, to sleep; as such it migrated first to Australia then to US and finally back to UK)

  1. to stay, to lodge, to board; thus crash at, to stay at; crash with, to stay with.

1968 - [US] N. von Hoffman We are the People Our Parents Warned Us Against 275: I don’t have a place to crash.

1970 - [US] Time 30 Mar. 10: A transient arrives looking for a place to crash.

1981 - [US] A.K. Shulman On the Stroll 226: I don’t have any place to stay and I wondered [...] if I could crash with you for a little while.

1999 - [UK] Indep. on Sun. Rev. 10 Oct. 67: He crashed at my apartment for a while.

From “A Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English” by Eric Partridge: Crash the (one’s) swede:

to get one’s head down on the pillow: Royal Navy, lowerdeck; since ca. 1920:

  • Weekly Telegraph (25 Oct. 1944). A more violent version of the earlier army set the swede down. c.f. also the later crash down or simply crash.