finger in the pie, have a



finger in the pie, have a

Have an interest in or meddle in something. For example, When they nominated me for the board, I'm sure Bill had a finger in the pie. Another form of this idiom is have a finger in every pie, meaning "to have an interest in or be involved in everything," as in She does a great deal for the town; she has a finger in every pie. The precise origin of this metaphor, which presumably alludes either to tasting every pie or being involved in their concoction, has been lost. [Late 1500s]
See also: finger, have

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
HumphryHUM-freeEnglish (Rare)
MaikeMIE-kə (German)Frisian, German
Mindaugas-Lithuanian
NiklasNIK-lahs (Swedish), NEEK-lahs (Finnish)Swedish, Finnish, Danish, Norwegian, German
Sollemnia-Late Roman
Young-Hoyung-hoKorean