zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Beyond Cars
/
Why Is A 'Cockpit' Called Such A Funny Word?
Why Is A 'Cockpit' Called Such A Funny Word?-April 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:13:59

Image for article titled Why Is A 'Cockpit' Called Such A Funny Word?

Have you ever had a word all of a sudden lose its normal, expected associations and then reveal itself to you, in all its inherent weirdness? You can get there by repeating a word over and over until you force all meaning out of it, but sometimes the weirdness of the word is so close to the surface it just happens.

That’s what happened to me, this weekend when the word “” popped into my head. Why the hell do we use such a loaded, weird-ass word for something so, you know, serious? Let’s find out.

Image for article titled Why Is A 'Cockpit' Called Such A Funny Word?

Cockpit. It’s a funny word. Break it down into its component halves, and you can come out with words that mean “penis” and “hole,” like a meatus, which is very much not what a cockpit is usually about.

If we take the “cock” part not for the slang for genitals but for a chicken, then we’re not much better off, but we are closer to the original use of the word. The earliest uses of the word “cockpit” , when it was used to refer to a hole or arena where cocks/chickens were placed, to fight.

Image for article titled Why Is A 'Cockpit' Called Such A Funny Word?

Now, in general, cockfighting, dog fighting, bullfighting and most other forms of cruel animal-based bloodsport are uncommon or even completely forbidden in the control areas of aircraft or racing cars, so how did we get from a hole full of chicken blood to the control seat of an aircraft?

It seems there are two main schools of thought about how this happened. One theory suggests that early pilots referred to the cramped confines of those primitive airplanes as “cockpits” because of how small they were, which I suppose reminded some of them of cockfighting pits.

In the context of aircraft, “cockpit” seems to first appear in print around 1914, which makes sense, as that’s the start of World War I, the first time-powered aircraft were used in quantity in warfare. The warfare angle may have been what associated cockpits for cockfights with the control area of an aircraft, because, as website tells it,

By the early 1700s, “cockpit” was being used in a figurative sense for any arena of battle or conflict, especially if enclosed, or an area of intense and important activity. It was this “place where the important things are done” sense (and not, thank heavens, the “fighting chickens” meaning) that led “cockpit” to be applied to the pilot’s compartment in an aircraft and, by extension, the “control position” in a racing car, sailboat or similar conveyance.

that connects cock-fighting cockpits to a 1635 London theater called The Cockpit, and from there somehow would have become associated with the idea of a control center and hence to aircraft, but I find this one kind of a stretch.

What could be more plausible is a nautical origin of the word, and this origin is free from having to think about roosters murdering one another.

On naval ships in the 1600s and on, there was a position known as a c and this was the person in charge of a ship’s smaller auxiliary boat, used to carry people to and from shore, to board other ships, etc.

The French term coque (shell) gives us the alternate meaning of “cock” in English for “boat,” sometimes the hilarious “” This use of “cock” plus “,” an archaic term for a servant, is why “coxswain” is the “boat tender,” or “,” the person on a ship in charge of the smaller vessel.

Image for article titled Why Is A 'Cockpit' Called Such A Funny Word?

The coxswain’s station towards the stern of the ship was called “the cockpit,” and was also used as the place where the ship’s surgeon would tend to the wounded during a battle.

This area doesn’t seem to have been too pleasant, with one description painting it pretty miserably:

The surgeon’s mate messed in a space only six feet square in the cockpit, “screened off with canvas, and shut in by chests, dark as a dungeon, and smelling intolerably of putrefied cheese and rancid butter.”

Ewww.

Awful-smelling and dark thought it may have been, during battles the cockpit would have been a place of considerable action, activity, tension, pressure, and all that, which would have all been the sort of actions and tone of an early aircraft control seat, so it’s possible that the name was applied by sailors familiar with the term during WWI.

Image for article titled Why Is A 'Cockpit' Called Such A Funny Word?

The coxswain or cox is also what the sport of rowing calls the guy who sits in the and yells at the rowers, and this is directly taken from the navy, when the coxswain would have performed a similar job, yelling at sailors rowing the boat.

The coxswain’s position in this boat is , and it houses the person who is controlling the whole boat, so calling that control position in a plane or automobile makes sense, too.

We’re dealing with two fundamental possible origin stories here: One that suggests the control seat reminded people of a cockfighting ring, and one where the name was derived from an area near the back of a ship where the guy in charge of the smaller ships was, or where the guy in charge of the smaller ship itself sat.

I’m sort of inclined to lean more to the naval-derived origins of the word than the chicken-fighting origins, as I think there are so many words that could have been used to describe a small, enclosed space, and cockfighting doesn’t really have any connotation of a control position, where the coxswain’s stations do.

Still, it’s a funny word no matter where it came from, and I suppose I should just take joy in that.

Cockpit.

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Beyond Cars
Crystal Chunks Are Bursting Through The Road In China
Crystal Chunks Are Bursting Through The Road In China
A video of what looks like quartz breaking through the surface of a is making the rounds on . I don’t get over there much, being suspicious of the Chinese over concerns of it spying on its users, as the reports. OK, fine. Actually, I just don’t get the humor...
Apr 6, 2026
Aircraft Touch Tips During Blizzard At Japanese Airport
Aircraft Touch Tips During Blizzard At Japanese Airport
As at , its port side wing the starboard vertical stabilizer of bound for Hong Kong. This comes at Tokyo’s Haneda Airport, and . “Our aircraft, which was stationary at the time with no customers nor crew onboard, was struck by a Korean Air A330 which was taxiing past,”...
Apr 6, 2026
Marshmallow Treats Ended Up On The Royal Air Force's No-Fly List
Marshmallow Treats Ended Up On The Royal Air Force's No-Fly List
Over in the United Kingdom, there’s a certain dessert known as a “teacake” — or, as a British friend kindly informed me, it’s more accurately known as a “Tunnock” in Scotland. Basically, the food in question for this particular story are actually a cookie base topped with marshmallow, coated...
Apr 6, 2026
String Of Boeing Failures Continues With 737-800 Flight Turning Back With Cracked Cockpit Windshield
String Of Boeing Failures Continues With 737-800 Flight Turning Back With Cracked Cockpit Windshield
In the wake of recent major , including , , and the debacle that was , it isn’t a good time for further failures by the company. that would , an unrelated 737-800 with a cracked windshield, became international news this weekend. The flight took off from Sapporo-New Chitose...
Apr 6, 2026
Deadliest Train In America Kills 3 People In 2 Separate Collisions At The Same Crossing
Deadliest Train In America Kills 3 People In 2 Separate Collisions At The Same Crossing
operate between Orlando and Miami and hold the unwelcome distinction of being both the first intra-city high speed rail in the U.S. and the , by far. After three people died at a single grade crossing in two separate incidents last week it seems the feds are finally perking...
Apr 6, 2026
2023 Zero DSR/X: The Bike Of The Future, But Not Our Future
2023 Zero DSR/X: The Bike Of The Future, But Not Our Future
The world, in 2023, is cyberpunk. We’ve got the , the , and the that keeps the and the . But in cyberpunk media, people are always riding . Why are we stuck with the same bikes we’ve always had? , it seems, wants to address this grievous wrong....
Apr 6, 2026
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved