eat humble pie - meaning and definition. What is eat humble pie
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What (who) is eat humble pie - definition

IDIOMATIC EXPRESSION
Umbles; Umble pie; Eat humble pie

eat humble pie         
Suffer humiliation, endure mortification, be humbled, be abashed, be taken down, eat dirt.
eat humble pie         
make a humble apology and accept humiliation. [humble pie is from a pun based on umbles 'offal', considered inferior food.]
eat humble pie         
see humble

Wikipedia

Humble pie

To eat humble pie, in common usage, is to face humiliation and subsequently apologize for a serious mistake. Humble pie, or umble pie, is also a term for a variety of pastries based on medieval meat pies.

The expression derives from umble pie, a pie filled with chopped or minced offal, especially of deer but often other meats. Umble evolved from numble (after the Middle French nombles), meaning "deer's innards".

Although "umbles" and the modern word "humble" are etymologically unrelated, each word has appeared with and without the initial "h" after the Middle Ages until the 19th century. Since the sound "h" is dropped in many dialects, the phrase was hypercorrected as "humble pie". While "umble" is now gone from the language, the phrase remains, carrying the fossilized word as an idiom.

Examples of use of eat humble pie
1. Yesterday, the Chancellor was forced to eat humble pie in the Commons over his economic forecasts, admitting to jeering MPs that he had been woefully over–optimistic.
2. When Sourav Ganguly was the master of all he surveyed, Rahul Dravid was made to eat humble pie and wear the wicket keeper‘s gloves to keep his place in the one–day team.
3. Gamble lost Most French political analysts now rule out any miracle comeback for Dominique de Villepin as a presidential hopeful, after he was forced to eat humble pie on French television on Monday night.
4. Maybe time for those critics that accused and implicated the Russian government in this murder to eat humble pie, or at least reassess their thoughts. – Dab, Cambs England Add your comment Name: Your email address will not be publishedEmail: Town and country: Terms and conditionsYour comment: make text area biggerYou have characters left.
5. The name is said to date from the 1'26 General Strike when miners from the town were starved back to work before their counterparts in surrounding towns and were therefore forced to eat "humble pie". Mr Callaghan, who owns the venue, Harry‘s Bar, said that entries from across the world are invited for the contest on December 13.