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Probably from Italianspade, plural of spada(“the ace of spades”, literally “sword, spade”), from earlier *spata, from Latinspatha, from Ancient Greekσπᾰ́θη(spắthē). Cognate with Etymology 1. So called for the shape, though what the shape was exactly meant to represent has been debated.[1]
Example: Max was in a hospital in New York and "the night nurse was a groovy spade, and in the afternoon for therapy there was a chick from Israel who was interesting, but there was nothing much to do in the morning, so I left".
It had even gotten to the point that Negroes were no longer in the hip scene, not even as totem figures. It was unbelievable. Spades, the very soul figures of Hip, of jazz, of the hip vocabulary itself, man and like dig and baby and scarf and split and later and so fine, of civil rights and graduating from Reed College and living on North Beach, down Mason, and balling spade cats—all that good elaborate petting and patting and pouring soul all over the spades—all over, finished, incredibly.
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