"Jack of all trades, master of none" is a figure of speech used in reference to a person who has dabbled in many skills, rather than gaining expertise by focusing on one.
The shortened version "a jack of all trades" is often a compliment for a person who is good at fixing things, and has a very good broad knowledge. A "Jack of all trades" may be a master of integration, as such an individual knows enough from many learned trades and skills to be able to bring the individual's disciplines together in a practical manner. This person is a generalist rather than a specialist.
Video Jack of all trades, master of none
Origins
In Elizabethan English the quasi-New Latin term Johannes factotum ("Johnny do-it-all") was sometimes used, with the same negative connotation that "Jack of all trades" sometimes has today. The term was famously used by Robert Greene in his 1592 booklet Greene's Groats-Worth of Wit, in which he dismissively refers to actor-turned-playwright William Shakespeare with this term, the first published mention of the writer.
In 1612, the English-language version of the phrase appeared in the book "Essays and Characters of a Prison" by English writer Geffray Mynshul (Minshull), originally published in 1618, and probably based on the author's experience while held at Gray's Inn, London, when imprisoned for debt.
Maps Jack of all trades, master of none
"Master of none"
The "master of none" element appears to have been added later; which made the statement less flattering to the person receiving. Today, the phrase used in its entirety generally describes a person whose knowledge, while covering a number of areas, is superficial in all of them. When abbreviated as simply "jack of all trades", it is an ambiguous statement; the user's intention is then dependent on context. However when "master of none" is added this is unflattering and sometimes added in jest. In North America, the phrase has been in use since 1721, typically in its short form.
"Still better than a master of one" is the end of the full phrase, though it is usually shortened with the intent to disrespect people.
In other languages
Sayings and terms resembling "jack of all trades" appear in almost all languages. Whether they are meant positively or negatively is dependent on the context. While many of these refer to a "jack of all trades," the fundamental idea they are trying to convey may be entirely different.
- Afrikaans: Hansie-my-kneg ("Man of all work;" literally "Johnny-my-servant")
- Arabic:
- Najdi Arabic: ???? ???????? ???? ("The one who knows two trades is a liar.")
- Egyptian Arabic: ??? ????? ?????? ???? ("The one who knows seven trades but is so unlucky.")
- Moroccan Arabic: ??? ????? ?????? ???? ("The one who knows seven trades but has no wealth.")
- Syrian Arabic: ???? ???????? ???? ??????? ("Who does several trades, is incapable of managing any.")
- Lebanese Arabic: ?????? ??????? ???? ??????? ("seven occupations, with no luck/money")
- Bengali: ??? ????? ????
- Bulgarian: ??????? ?? ??????("Master of everything"), ???????? ?? ?????? ("Professor of everything"), ?????????? ?? ??????("Specialist in everything")
- Chinese:
- Mandarin (Simplified): ???,??? (Traditional): ???,??? ("All trades known, all trades dull")
- Mandarin (Simplified): ??? - The "10,000 gold oil," also the name of Tiger Balm, can be used to refer to someone who meets this description.
- Mandarin (Simplified): ??? ("He who knows Ten Thousand Things")
- Shanghainese (Simplified): ??? ("A cat with only 3 legs")
- Cantonese (Simplified): ???,??? (Traditional): ???,??? ("Equipped with knives all over, yet none is sharp")
- Croatian: Katica za sve ("Kate for everything")
- Czech: Devatero ?emesel, desátá bída. ("Nine crafts, tenth is misery.")
- Danish: Altmuligmand ("All tasks man" - now used for handyman) Tusindekunstner ("thousand tasks artist")
- Dutch: Manusje-van-alles ("Manusje-of-all"), Manus referring to the Latin word meaning "hand," usually meant positively. Also: Handige Harry ("Handy Harry"), 12 ambachten, 13 ongelukken of 12 stielen, 13 ongelukken ("12 trades, 13 accidents").
- Esperanto: Kiu ?asas du leporojn, kaptas neniun. ("Who chases two jackrabbits catches none.")
- Estonian: Üheksa ametit, kümnes nälg ("Nine trades, the tenth one -- hunger").
- Finnish: Jokapaikanhöylä ("Plane for all purposes"). Usually a compliment, but sometimes implies irony: a tool designed for all purposes is not really good for any specific purpose.
- French: Homme-à-tout-faire ("Do-all man" but the meaning is now used more for the job of 'handy-man' than for anything else), Touche-à-tout, bon à rien ("Touch everything, good in nothing", negative connotation), Qui trop embrasse, mal étreint ("he who embraces too much, has a weak grasp", negative connotation), Avoir plusieurs cordes à son arc (To have many strings to one's bow, positive), Avoir plusieurs casquettes ("To have many caps", positive), Homme-orchestre ("Orchestra man", neutral). Occasionally the expression Maître Jacques (fr) (literally "Master Jack") is used.
- German: Hansdampf in allen Gassen (literally: "Jack Steam in every alley," with "Hans Dampf" being a personal name from a novel), Tausendsassa ("thousand activities"). In a negative sense it can be said about a person: Er kann alles, aber nichts davon richtig. ("He can do everything, but nothing properly.")
- Greek: ???????????? ??? ??????????? ("A man of many crafts and a deserted home"). The empty house - without a spouse and children - implies poverty and lack of prosperity.
- Hawaiian: Mea m?kaukau i n? hana like ?ole ("One versed in many different kinds of work"). Laukua ("One skilled in many trades").
- Hebrew: ???? ????? ?? ???? (short) or ???? ????? ?? ???? - ???? ???? ???? (full) ("He who has seized a lot, has not seized" (short) or "He who has seized a lot, has not seized -- He who has seized little, seized").
- Hindi: ???? ????, ???? ?????.
- Hungarian: Complimentary : Reneszánsz ember (lit. "Renaissance man") Derogatory : Mekk Elek ( a reference to a 1974 Hungarian television series with the same named protagonist)
- Icelandic: Þúsundþjalasmiður ("A craftsman of a thousand rasps").
- Italian: Esperto di tutto, maestro in niente ("Expert of everything, master of none").
- Japanese: ????? ("Many talents is no talent")
- Korean: ? ? ?? ?? ?? ?? ????? ?? ("A man of twelve talents has nothing to eat for dinner")
- Latin: ex omnibus aliquid, in toto nihil ("something from all, nothing in total")
- Lithuanian: Devyni amatai, de?imtas - badas ("When you have nine trades, then your tenth one is famine/starvation"). There is also Barb? ?imtadarb? ("Barbie with hundred professions"). Vis? kr?m? neap?iksi ("It's impossible to shit in every bush").
- Malay: Yang dikejar tak dapat, yang dikendong berciciran ("The pursued is not acquired, the held is dropped"). Meaning: Whilst seeking(something) we want, we may lose what we already have.
- Marathi: ?? ?? ?? ????? ??????? ("Ek na dhad Bharabhar chindhya - Not one complete, just heap of rags")
- Norwegian: Altmuligmann ("All tasks man" - now used for handyman) Tusenkunstner ("thousand tasks artist")
- Persian: ??? ???? ? ???????? ("All trades and no authority")
- Polish: Siedem fachów, ósma bieda ("Seven trades, the eighth one -- poverty"), cz?owiek orkiestra ("One man band").
- Portuguese: Pau pra toda obra ("Wood for every [building] work"); João-Faz-Tudo ("John-Makes-Everything"); Homem dos sete ofícios ("Man of seven trades"). The expression "quem tem jeito para tudo, não tem jeito para nada" ("Who has way for everything, has not way for nothing") conveys a similar meaning.
- Romanian: Bun la toate ?i la nimic ("Good at everything and at nothing")
- Russian: ? ????, ? ????, ? ?? ???? ????? ("And tailor and reaper and pipe player") -- means that person tries to be or actually is specialist in many unrelated professions. ?????????? ???????? ??????? ("Specialist in wide range") -- being an oxymoron widely used with irony, though some people use it in positive sense. ?????? ?? ??? ???? ("Master in all hands"). Used only as a term of praise. ?? ?????? ??? ?????????, ?? ???? ?? ???????? ("Starts ten things, finishes none"). ? ?????? ????? ??????? ("A peg for every barrel") -- someone who wants to add his word to every discussion (very often has negative meaning, used for someone annoying). ? ????, ? ????, ? ?? ???? ????? ("Can sew, mow and play the flute") -- the most ironic description.
- Serbian: Devojka za sve / ??????? ?? ??? ("A girl for everything") if used with a negative connotation. Specijalista op?te prakse / ???????????? ????? ?????? ("General practitioner") used with a negative connotation, though rarely because of the medical professional with the same title. Majstor svih zanata / ??????? ???? ?????? ("Master of all trades") if used with a positive connotation.
- Slovak: Diev?a pre v?etko. ("A girl for everything") Hodinový man?el ("An hour-rent husband") - especially used for someone adept at all kinds of common repairs.
- Slovene: Deklica za vse. ("A girl for everything")
- Spanish:
- Chile: Maestro Chasquilla ("Fringe Master") (This term has no negative connotation.)
- Spain, Argentina, Mexico, Colombia, Peru, Chile: Quien mucho abarca poco aprieta ("He who embraces too much, has a weak grasp")
- Spain, Colombia, Uruguay: Aprendiz de mucho, maestro de nada ("Apprentice of a lot, master of nothing")
- Spain: Maestro Liendre, que de todo sabe y de nada entiende. ("Knows about everything but understands nothing". This has a clearly negative connotation.)
- Spain, Mexico: Aprendiz de todo, maestro de nada. ("Apprentice of everything, master of nothing")
- Spain: Un océano de conocimiento de una pulgada de profundidad ("An ocean of knowledge of an inch deep")
- Peru: "Mil oficios" ("One thousand jobs")
- Mexico: A todo le tiras, y a nada le pegas ("You aim for everything, but you hit nothing")
- Mexico: Chambitas ("Little jobs")
- Mexico: Mil usos ("One thousand jobs")
- Mexico: Todólogo ("Handyman")
- Colombia: "Todero" (From Todo -everything-)
- Sinhala: ?????? ??? ?????? ?????, pronounced as "Siyalla dath, Kisith nodath".("Knows everything yet, doesn't know anything.")
- Swedish: Mångsysslare ("Multi tasker") Tusenkonstnär ("thousand tasks artist")
- Turkish: "On parma??nda on marifet (olan ki?i)" ("(Someone who) has ten different skills on his/her ten fingers")
- Tagalog: Marunong sa lahat, magaling sa wala ("Knows everything, good at nothing")
- Tamil: ?? ?????? ??????? ??? ???????? ???????? ("He who starts many businesses has no businesses")
- Thai: ???????????? ("Know like duck") -- ducks can walk, fly, and swim but they are good at nothing.
- Ukrainian :
- in positive meaning: "??????? ?? ??? ????" ("Master in all hands") - a person who can do all kind of tasks
- in negative meaning: "?????? ?? ??? ????" - a person who starts a lot of tasks, but is unable to successfully finish any of them.
- Urdu : "Har fann moula" (literally: "Every talent lord"). Also commonly used in Hindi sentences/phrases.
- Vietnamese: M?t ngh? cho chín, còn h?n chín ngh? ("Being master in one job is better than being average in nine jobs"), or Nh?t ngh? tinh, nh?t thân vinh ("Mastery in one job brings glory and success")
See also
- Polymath
References
External links
- The dictionary definition of jack of all trades at Wiktionary
Source of the article : Wikipedia