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{{Short description|English language expression for a mistaken emphasis}}
{{Wiktionary|bark up the wrong tree}}
'''Barking up the wrong tree''' is an [[idiomatic|idiomatic expression]] in English, which is used to suggest a mistaken emphasis in a specific context. The phrase is an allusion to the mistake made by dogs when they believe they have [[Treeing|chased a prey up a tree]], but the game may have escaped by leaping from one tree to another.<ref>Walsh, William Shepard. (1909). [https://
In other words, "if you are barking up the wrong tree, it means that you have completely misunderstood something or are totally wrong."<ref>{{cite web|url=
==Historical usage==
[[Bark (sound)|Barking]] up the wrong tree became common use in nineteenth century America in reference to hunting raccoons with a hunting dog. When the nocturnal animal takes to a tree, the dog is supposed to remain at the base of the tree until its owner arrives. However, in the dark, if the dog mistakes the tree where the raccoon has taken refuge, the hunter may lose it. The expression was commonly used by writers of western life and tales, appearing in works by James Hall, David Crockett, and Albert Pike.<ref>Funk, Charles Earle, and Tom Funk. 2107 curious word origins, sayings and expressions from white elephants to a song and dance. Galahad Books, 1993.</ref>
* 1833
* 1833 – "I told him that he reminded me of the meanest thing on God's earth, an old coon dog ''barking up the wrong tree''." – ''Sketches of David Crockett,'' p. 58. (New York).<ref name="Thornton43"/>
* 1834
* 1838
* 1839
==References==
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==Sources==
* ___________. (1886). ''Barking up the wrong Tree; a Darkey Sketch in One Act and One Scene.'' New York: Dick & Fitzgerald. {{OCLC|20640219}}
* Boye DeMente, Lafayette. (2007). ''Cheater's Guide to Speaking English Like a Native,'' Rutland, Vermont: Tuttle Publishing. {{ISBN
* Conald, James. (1872). ''Chambers's English Dictionary: Pronouncing, Explanatory, and Etymological with vocabularies of Scottish words and phrases, Americanisms, &c.'' London : W. & R. Chambers. {{OCLC|37826777}}
* Thornton, Richard H. and Louise Hanley. (1912). ''An American glossary.'' Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott. {{OCLC|318970}}
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[[Category:English-language idioms]]
[[Category:Dog behavior]]
[[Category:Metaphors referring to dogs]]
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