Red herring

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A red herring, also referred to as a kipper, is a dried, smoked, herring. The curing process turns the fish red.

This sense of the phrase can be dated to the mid seventeenth century, and is used by Samuel Pepys in his diary for the entry 28th of February 1660 "Up in the morning, and had some red herrings to our breakfast, while my boot-heel was a-mending, by the same token the boy left the hole as big as it was before."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The phrase red herring has a number of metaphorical senses that share the general sense of something being a diversion from the original objective:

  • a type of logical fallacy in which one purports to prove one's point by means of irrelevant arguments. See Ignoratio elenchi.
  • in detective work, mystery fiction, and puzzle-solving, a false clue which leads investigators, readers, or solvers towards an incorrect solution.
  • in politics, a minor or even phony issue trumped up as being of great importance, in order to influence voters to vote for one party or candidate and against the other, or distract from more important issues that might help the opposing party.
  • in literature, a plot device intended to distract the reader from a more important event in the plot, usually a twist ending. See also MacGuffin.
  • in adventure games, an item or object of no practical use; its purpose may be to frustrate the gamer who tries to find the intended use for it. Famous examples are the chainsaw of Maniac Mansion and the actual red herring (although this fish proved useful...) in the The Secret of Monkey Island. Some red herrings exist because some secondary plots or puzzles that existed in drafts were removed from the latest version of the games, but some of the items relevant to those puzzles were forgotten and made their way into the game.

The phrase may have originated from the practice of saving a hunted fox by dragging a red herring across its trail to cause the pursuing hounds to lose the true scent and follow the false trail of herring odour instead. In this context the [Oxford English Dictionary] records its first written use occurring in 1686 "To draw a red herring across the track". There are however reasons to question this attribution of the metaphor.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> There also is a nursery rhyme, 'The Man in the Wilderness', in which a man answers the question of how many strawberries grew in the sea with 'As many as red herrings grew in the wood'.

Red herring can also refer to:

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References

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