Kneader : nm (word from latin pistrinum meaning "mill wheat, bakery "). the mess is a chest in which bread is kneaded.
Getting into (a dirty) mess / getting into a mess / getting into a mess / getting into a mess: bad situation, complicated or embarrassing situation, financial embarrassment, misery; to be in a bad situation, to be in trouble, to be in misery from which it seems impossible to get out.
Get out of trouble / get out of trouble / get into trouble / get into trouble; get out of a bad situation, help, save.
What a mess!
Originally (since the XNUMXth century), the kneader was this wooden chest in which the baker kneaded the bread dough. With mechanization, this chest was replaced by a tank in which an arm mechanically mixes the dough and which has kept the name of mess.
Quote from the French writer Louis-Ferdinand Destouches dit Céline (1894-1961) “Salads, kneaders, porridge of perditions, all in fraternitarian vases, humanitarian sticky suffocations where the trep darkens, mud, slumps, vinasse, pukes and s 'falls asleep. Fall asleep? Not long ! Until the very next! We'll wake you up frothy! Sorry butterflies! Dreamers booklets! The furnaces are almost ready! Crackle! All the distance is already blazing very happily! " in Trivia for a massacre - 1938.