every tom, dick, and harry

Slang definitions & phrases for every tom, dick, and harry

every Tom, Dick, and Harry

noun phrase

Every and any man, esp a very ordinary one; Ordinary Joe: letting every Tom, Dick, and Harry in on the election (1734+)


Idioms and Phrases with every tom, dick, and harry

every Tom, Dick, and Harry

Also, every mother's son; every man Jack. Everyone, all ordinary individuals, as in This model should appeal to every Tom, Dick, and Harry. The use of masculine names in this way dates from Shakespeare's time (he used Tom, Dick, and Francis in 1 Henry IV), but the current one dates from the early 1800s. The two variants are largely British usage but occasionally are used in America. The first is recorded as early as 1583, whereas the second dates from the first half of the 1800s.