A person who closely resembles a parent, as in Like her mother, Karen has very little patience--a chip off the old block. This term, with its analogy to a chip of stone or wood that closely resembles the larger block it was cut from, dates from ancient times (Theocritus, Idyls, c. 270 b.c.). In English it was already a proverb by the
17th century, then often put as
chip of the old block.




