Laughing stock

Origin of: Laughing stock

Laughing stock

A laughing stock is an object of ridicule and dates from the early 16th century. It derives from the medieval punishment of placing wrongdoers in the public stocks, wooden pillories that confined miscreants, usually by the ankles. Anyone confined to the stocks, which were usually positioned in market squares, were open to ridicule and abuse from passers-by and thus were described as laughing stocks.