OK, So Here's What 'Laughing Up Their Sleeves' Actually Means

For once, it's not just word salad.
Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

It’s been a chaotic week for American politics. And an even busier week for President Donald Trump’s Twitter presence.

It might seem like the leader of the free world has a full plate ― what with people questioning the future of health care, the former FBI Director James Comey’s firing and the general state of infrastructure in the U.S., to name just a few concerns ― but no.

Somehow, he still has time to tweet about public enemy No. 1 Rosie O’Donnell AND flex his seemingly obscure idiom skills in yet another reference to his defeat of Hillary Clinton.

Russia must be laughing up their sleeves watching as the U.S. tears itself apart over a Democrat EXCUSE for losing the election.

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) May 11, 2017

“Russia must be laughing up their sleeves,” he wrote, “watching as the U.S. tears itself apart over a Democrat EXCUSE for losing the election.”

”Laughing up their what?” the American people collectively asked.

@realDonaldTrump "laughing up their sleeves"?

— Jules Suzdaltsev (@jules_su) May 11, 2017

I think "laughing up their sleeves" sounded better in the original Russian https://t.co/Ub4lHjjU2t

— Dante Atkins (@DanteAtkins) May 11, 2017

I guess "laughing up their sleeves" is a Russian expression that doesn't translate well to English https://t.co/eRsIobGVVn

— Ross Luippold (@rossluippold) May 11, 2017

WYD?

The usual: standing among bushes, laughing up my sleeves

— R. Eric Thomas (@oureric) May 11, 2017

@realDonaldTrump "Laughing up their sleeves"????

Probably sounds better in the original Russian because no American has ever used this phrase.

— Benjamin Steinberg (@BJS_quire) May 11, 2017

We all chuckled but we all also excused ourselves to somewhere private to try laughing up our sleeves in search of some recognizable act

— Alana Massey (@AlanaMassey) May 11, 2017

He was laughing up his sleeve so bigly he choked like a dog, it was unbelievable, nobody had ever done it before. Believe me.

— Oliver Willis (@owillis) May 11, 2017

RuSsiA MuST bE lAugHInG uP ThEiR SLeEveS pic.twitter.com/TuLUuxKStC

— chaps (@UncleChaps) May 11, 2017

Spotted in the Oval yesterday: Russians "laughing up their sleeves" pic.twitter.com/f7v6jtcjjw

— Alex Mallin (@alex_mallin) May 11, 2017

The particular assortment of word salad is actually a real phrase, though. According to Merriam-Webster, universal guardian of language, it means “to be secretly happy about or amused by something (such as someone else’s trouble).”

Oxford Dictionaries concurs, defining it as being “secretly or inwardly amused.”

It sounds like a perfect idiom for Trump’s America, to be honest. Who, these days, isn’t laughing up their sleeves about one thing or another? Take, for example, Merriam-Webster’s use of the phrase in a sentence: “The mayor’s critics were laughing up their sleeves when news of the scandal was first reported.”

Tweaked slightly it becomes: “Hillary Clinton was laughing up her sleeve when Donald Trump first won the GOP nomination.”

Yeah, we enter it. https://t.co/3vvrAEFBHu

— Merriam-Webster (@MerriamWebster) May 11, 2017

So, while you might have become accustomed to guffawing at the 140-character declarations slung by our commander-in-chief, this one’s real.

The dictionary-in-chief has spoken.

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