## Skulduggery: A Word Transformed by Immigration
**Skulduggery** — meaning underhanded trickery or dishonest scheming — is one of English's most satisfying words to say and one of its most mysterious to trace. Its history involves Scottish dialect, American folk etymology, and a complete reinvention of meaning somewhere in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.
### The Scottish Original
The word almost certainly descends from Scots **sculduddery** (also spelled **sculdudrie**, **sculduddry**), a word attested from the 18th century meaning 'adultery, fornication, sexual impropriety, obscenity.' It appears in the literary culture surrounding Robert Burns, where it described bawdy behaviour with a mix of disapproval and relish.
The ultimate origin of the Scots word is uncertain. Several theories have been proposed:
- A connection to Scots *sculd* + *duddery* (perhaps 'fault' + 'ragged clothing', implying disreputable conduct) - An expressive compound with no clear etymology, formed for its phonaesthetic quality — the sounds themselves suggesting something squalid and ridiculous - A distant connection to Old Norse or Middle English terms for shame or concealment
No theory has achieved scholarly consensus. What is clear is that the word existed in Scots before it crossed the Atlantic.
### The Transatlantic Transformation
Scottish immigrants brought *sculduddery* to America in the early 19th century. What happened next is a textbook case of **folk etymology** — the process by which speakers reshape an unfamiliar word to match familiar ones.
American ears heard the first syllable as **skull** — a familiar English word with connotations of death, danger, and piracy (skull and crossbones). The spelling shifted to **skull-duggery** or **skulduggery**, and the second element acquired a vague association with 'digging' or 'drudgery.' Neither connection is real, but both felt right.
More significantly, the **meaning shifted completely**. Scots *sculduddery* was about sexual impropriety. American *skulduggery* came to mean political trickery, financial fraud, and general dishonesty — with no sexual connotation at all. The first known American use, from **1856**, appears in a political context: a congressman accusing opponents of electoral skulduggery.
Skulduggery is a particularly clean example of how folk etymology works:
1. **An unfamiliar word enters a new speech community** — Scottish immigrants bring *sculduddery* to America 2. **Speakers reinterpret its sounds** — *sculd-* becomes *skull-*, connecting it to a familiar, evocative word 3. **The new association reshapes the meaning** — *skull* suggests death, deception, piracy → the word shifts from sex to crime 4. **The new form displaces the old** — American *skulduggery* becomes the standard; Scots *sculduddery* fades to dialectal obscurity
The process is so complete that most English speakers today have no idea the word was ever about sex. The skull has fully conquered the word.
Both **skulduggery** and **skullduggery** (with double L) are accepted. The double-L form makes the folk etymology more visible; the single-L form is closer to the Scots original. British dictionaries tend to prefer *skulduggery*; American dictionaries often list *skullduggery* first. Neither is wrong — both are folk-etymological adaptations of a Scots word that spelled its first syllable
### A Family of Mysterious Trickery Words
Skulduggery belongs to a curious category: English words for dishonest behaviour whose origins are themselves suspiciously obscure.
- **shenanigans** — first attested in California in 1855, one year before skulduggery; origin unknown (Irish *sionnachuighim* 'I play the fox'? Spanish *chanada* 'trick'?) - **jiggery-pokery** — British English for dishonest manipulation, from Scots *joukery-pawkery* ('dodgery-trickery') - **hocus-pocus** — mock Latin, possibly a parody of the Eucharistic *hoc est corpus* - **chicanery** — from French *chicane*, ultimately of unknown origin
It is as if the English language, when naming dishonesty, prefers words whose own origins are slightly dishonest — untraceable, shape-shifting, resistant to scholarly investigation.