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English
Etymology
pandy + bat
Perhaps also a pun on the Latin pendebat "you paid".
Noun
pandy bat (plural pandy bats)
- (chiefly Ireland, historical) (originally) a stout leather strap reinforced internally with whalebone or even lead, and used at Jesuit schools to inflict corporal punishment on pupils by striking the palm; (latterly, sometimes) more loosely applied to any punishment bat
- 1930 Irish Province News, 5th Year No 3 (Irish Province of the Society of Jesus) "Obituary: Fr James Daly"
- All this punctuated, driven home, by loud-resounding strokes of the pandy-bat, not administered one after another quickly, but at regular intervals.
- 1957 Irish Province News, 32nd Year No 3 (Irish Province of the Society of Jesus) "Obituary: Fr Esmonde White (1875-1957)"
- While Prefect of Studies in Belvedere Junior House, he combined gentleness with severity in such perfect measure that a past pupil recalls: “He hit very hard with the pandy bat but obviously felt every bit as miserable about it as the unfortunate victim!”
1991 March 3, Gregory Allen, “Letters: Christian Brothers”, in The Irish Times, page 11:The strap seemed preferable to the cane and the pandybat.
1991, Benedict Kiely, Drink to the Bird: a Memoir, London: Methuen, →ISBN, page 69:Round about here it would seem to me to have become necessary to make some general statement about the Irish Christian Brothers. ... I have heard them blamed for many things. ... Blamed for the pandy-bat, as it was called in Dublin, or the leather as we called it in the North.
1995, Aidan Higgins, Donkey's Years: Memories of a Life as Story Told, London: Secker & Warburg, →ISBN, pages 140-141:The procedure was that you knocked on the door and were called in, presented the docket, watched the pandy bat (some were slim, some fat) being removed from a drawer or inside the soutane. You took your punishment on either hand, thanked the priest and withdrew. ... The pandybat was a sort of sjambok slick as a spatula that imparted sudden deadening pain, felt in the head as in either hand, turn and turn about, pain travelling through the nervous system.
2005, Fred Sedgwick, How to Teach with a Hangover: a Practical Guide to Overcoming Classroom Crises, London, New York: Continuum, →ISBN, page 92:Crowded round a small table are seven figures: a schoolmaster holding what looks like a wooden spoon — it is probably a pandy bat, a stick kept for the sole purpose of hitting children — over the half-open palm of a mop-haired boy, who is wiping a tear away from his eye as he waits for the next blow.
- 2010 Martin Tierney, Reflections of a Dublin priest (Dublin : Columba Press) →ISBN p. 19
- Corporal punishment was administered by use of a thick leather strap called a ‘pandy bat’.