A mischievous prank or antic, often playful in nature. Also refers to the legendary Queen of Carthage in classical mythology.
The prank meaning comes from 18th-century American slang, possibly from the mythological Dido who was known for clever schemes. Queen Dido's story involves her founding Carthage through a clever land-purchasing trick.
The connection between a legendary queen and modern pranks lies in cleverness - Queen Dido famously outwitted land sellers by cutting an ox hide into thin strips to encircle more territory than expected. Her name became synonymous with clever tricks.
Dido, Queen of Carthage in Virgil's Aeneid, is historically portrayed as abandoning her throne for love of Aeneas. Later invocations ('cut a dido') reduced her to a cautionary tale of female irrationality and romantic excess.
Use 'antic' or 'prank' instead; if referencing the historical figure, center her political agency (founding Carthage, negotiating land) rather than her romantic narrative.
["antic","prank","foolish act"]
Dido was a shrewd political leader and founder of Carthage; her story has been overshadowed by male authors' romantic framing.
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