The village of Blarney in County Cork, Ireland, is home to Blarney Castle, and in the southern wall of that edifice lies the famous Blarney Stone. Legend has it that anyone who kisses the Blarney Stone will gain the gift of skillful flattery, but that gift must be attained at the price of some limber maneuvering—you have to lie down and hang your head over a precipice to reach and kiss the stone. One story claims the word blarney gained popularity as a word for “flattery” after Queen Elizabeth I of England used it to describe the flowery (but apparently less than honest) cajolery of McCarthy Mor, who was then the lord of Blarney Castle.
She was charmed by his blarney.
a tale with more than a hint of blarney
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Willy’s belief that good connections matter more than skill and that blarney and bluff can substitute for hard work explains a good deal about our current national disorder.—Theater Critic, Los Angeles Times, 1 Apr. 2026 Bluffing and blarney might be tried as a last resort.—Lance Eliot, Forbes.com, 8 Apr. 2025 Dinner, blarney and shenanigans with music and entertainment from Todd Menton (founder of Boiled in Lead), Peter Guertin, The O’Shea Irish Dancers and Katie McMahon (voice of River Dance).—Kristi Miller, Twin Cities, 15 Mar. 2025 Some tales are blarney.—Kevin Fisher-Paulson, San Francisco Chronicle, 28 Mar. 2023 See All Example Sentences for blarney
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Etymology
Blarney stone, a stone in Blarney Castle, near Cork, Ireland, held to bestow skill in flattery on those who kiss it