Eighty-six 86 Apr 2026

What all these uses share is . You’re not agonizing. You’re not negotiating. You’re just… done. The Deeper Lesson: Knowing When to 86 Here’s the part that sticks with me. Working in restaurants teaches you something most offices never will: some things are meant to run out.

— Service industry salute. 🫡

It’s one of the most durable pieces of slang to come out of the restaurant industry. But where did it come from? And why has it leaked out into the rest of our lives – from police scanners to software development to dating? eighty-six 86

The most romantic story: Chumley’s, a legendary Prohibition-era speakeasy in Greenwich Village, was located at 86 Bedford Street. Cops would reportedly call ahead to warn the bar of a raid: “Get everyone out the 86 Street door.” Soon, “86” meant “get lost” or “we’re out of here.”

You can’t prep infinite soup. You can’t polish infinite glasses. And when something is gone – really gone – you don’t cry over it. You 86 it, you strike it from the board, and you focus on what’s still hot, still fresh, still possible. What all these uses share is

In some early 20th-century soda fountains and bars, “86” was shorthand for “nix” or “no” – possibly rhyming slang. “Nix” → “six” → “86”? It’s a stretch, but slang rarely obeys logic.

And maybe that’s the best definition of 86 I’ve ever heard: You’re just… done

Some claim Delmonico’s, one of America’s first fine-dining restaurants, had an item #86 on its menu – a particularly popular steak. When it sold out, waiters told guests, “Sorry, 86 is done.”

Now go ahead. Look at your own menu. What needs to be 86’d today?

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