Learn English – Where does the term “tuck shop” come from

etymology

We used to a have a tuck shop at school that sold sausage rolls, pens and pencils etc.

Where does the word come from?

Best Answer

One definition of 'tuck' from The Free Dictionary relates this word to food, which I'm sure we've all heard before:

tuck away/into Informal:

To consume (food) heartily.

Though not definitive, there are two excerpts from Wikipedia worth considering...

  • Regarding the origin of 'tuck' in relation to shops:

    The term "tuck", meaning food, is slang and probably originates from such phrases as "to tuck into a meal". It is also closely related to the Australian English word "tucker", also meaning food.

  • And, regarding the origin of 'tuck', in itself:

    "Tucker" may originate with the lacework at the top of Nineteenth Century women's dresses, but the origin of its use in regard to food probably arises from the popular shops run in England by various members of the Tuck family between at least 1780 and 1850. The earliest reference found is to one Thomas Tuck whose famous "Tuck's Coffee House" in the university city of Norwich in Norfolk UK attracted many academics.