Tigers!
Contributor
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2005
- Messages
- 5,144
- Location
- On the wing, waiting for a kick.
- Basic Beliefs
- Bible believing revelational redemptionist (Baptist)
I am doubtful about the word copper having anything to do with uniform buttons, which would have been brass; more plausibly it is a corruption of (or shares a latin common root with) 'capture'.
'to cop' meaning 'to take' is common usage in the UK - for example 'cop a butchers at that' meaning 'take a look at that'; or 'cop a feel', meaning 'take a feel' (usually in reference to the breasts of one's chosen sexual partner, and with a vague overtone of the absence of consent 'She was pissed as a newt*, so I took the opportunity to cop a feel'). One who takes would therefore be a 'Copper' - although to my knowledge, nobody refers to the one taken as a 'Copee'
My grandfather (whose's family has many run-ins with the coppers in Collingwood, Melbourne in the 20-30s: SP bookies they were) told me that 'cop' was short for Constable On patrol