etymology - Origin of "Too Clever by Half"
The phrase "Too Clever by Half" is used to criticize someone for being overconfident in their thinking.
What is the origin of this phrase?
I read somewhere that it started as a backhanded compliment meant to imply that they are only half clever, but I couldn't find any corroboration.
Answer
From Google Books, here's a couple of thousand for too slow by half and a few hundred too quick by half. Even a couple of dozen too fat by half, and I'm sure there are plenty more adjectives you can be too much of by half.
The earliest usage I can find is Too Civil by Half A Farce in Two Acts by John Dent (1783), which the reviewer judges "Too dull by half!" Obviously it was a current expression even then. Maybe someone else will find an earlier instance, but I doubt the expression has a literary origin.
Richard Lovell Edgeworth Popular tales, 1837 has "Why, my horse Dobbin has more sense by half!", showing that it's not always too [adjective] by half.
I think OP's "only half clever" explanation is unlikely, not least because it wouldn't make any sense at all in Edgeworth's usage above. The actual fraction probably never had any significance - adding "by half" just happens to be the idiom used to add emphasis in these constructions.
If someone is too clever by half it often means they are irritatingly devious and manipulating, rather than actually very clever (the implication being that the speaker, and probably many others, see through the trickery).
Here's another (slightly different) definition from The Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary...
too clever by half - too confident of your own intelligence in a way that annoys other people.
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