Bull in a china shop

Origin of: Bull in a china shop

Bull in a china shop

This expression is used to describe inordinate clumsiness and dates from the early 19th century. It seems to be one of those figurative expressions that arrived fully formed into the language rather than deriving from a known or recorded bull that rampaged through a porcelain shop (although the spectacle of a bull destroying a china stall in an open country market is not beyond imagination).