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The noun is probably derived from one of the following:
A variant of spitchcock(“eel split lengthwise and broiled”).[1][2][3] from Middle Englishspiche-coke,[4] The further etymology is uncertain; the following possibilities have been suggested:
From spik(“animal fat, especially lard”),[7]spik, spike(“large nail; pointed stud”),[8] or spit, spite(“rod for cooking meat, spit; pointed object”);[9] + cok(“male of the common domestic fowl, cock, rooster”).[10]
Spatch cock, abbreviation of a diſpatch cock, an Iriſh diſh upon any ſudden occaſion. It is a hen juſt killed from the rooſt, or yard, and immediately ſkinned, ſplit, and broiled.
He then slew it [a chicken], dipped the corpse in boiling water to loosen the feathers, which he stripped off in masses, cut through its breast longitudinally, and with the aid of an iron plate, placed over a charcoal fire, proceeded to make a spatchcock, or as it is more popularly termed, a "sudden death."
1901 October 11, Redvers Buller, quotee, “Sir R. Buller and his critics”, in The Times, number 36,583, London: George Edward Wright, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 10, column 2:
I, therefore, spatchcocked into the middle of that telegram a sentence in which I suggested it would be necessary to surrender the garrison, what he should do when he surrendered, and how he should do it.
Why is the underplot of King Lear in which Edmund figures lifted out of [Philip] Sidney's Arcadia and spatchcocked on to a Celtic legend older than history?
2010 July 28, Peter Hain, “Tories sandbagged Clegg on electoral reform”, in The Guardian, →ISSN:
Instead of introducing a separate bill on the alternative vote referendum, which would have been supported by Labour in a vote through parliament, the government has spatchcocked it together with the most blatant gerrymander of parliamentary constituency boundaries since the days of the rotten boroughs.
↑ 11.011.1William Sayers (2012) “Challenges for English Etymology in the Twenty-first Century, with Illustrations”, in Studia Neophilologica: A Journal of Germanic and Romance Languages and Literature, volume 84, number 1, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Taylor & Francis, →DOI, →ISSN, →OCLC, pages 4–5.
^ [Francis Grose] (1785) “Spatch cock”, in A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, London: S. Hooper,, →OCLC: “[A]bbreviation of a diſpatch cock, an Iriſh diſh upon any ſudden occaſion. It is a hen juſt killed from the rooſt, or yard, and immediately ſkinned, ſplit, and broiled.”