Where did we get the expression "mad as a Hatter"? :)
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Where did we get the expression "mad as a Hatter"? :)
I have no idea??? I want to know too
Hmm, we think that this has got something to do with the fact that hatters used mercury for their job, which is poisonous and made them freaky - mad. The expression existed long before Carroll, but we think that he made it more famous.
thats what i was thinking that it has something to do with the profession
Me me me oh wow I have a book on this...
And this has got to be one of my longest posts everQuote:
Originally Posted by "Red herrings and White Elephants; The origins of the phrases we use everyday" By Albert Jack
(after prievew ) or maybe not :D ....
ps this book is A-mazing :nod:
Very well done Nightshade! :banana: :banana: :banana: :banana: :banana:
You get a chorus line of dancing bug eyed yellow thingeys.
:brow: :brow:
Very industrious answer of precise origins!
Well done! I had hoped to catch a few with that one, but the egg is on my face! :blush: And there's your next phraze: Where did we get the phraze "you've got egg on your face"?
ohh guess what this is also in my book :D
Okay now I have a q where does brass monkeys come from? Thats not in my book even though he says on theecover that he will explain it he doesnt which is a bit annoying as Ive always wondered about that one.Quote:
Originally Posted by red herrings and white elephants
:D
*edit* It appears I just told a lie I found it under its full name that is "Cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey" still it would be fun to find oput who else is under the missaprhension as to the origin and meaning of theis phrase http://www.websmileys.com/sm/angels/teu26.gif
That one I don't have. BTW, nice smiley! Don't keep us in suspense!http://www.websmileys.com/sm/crazy/1092.gifQuote:
Originally Posted by Nightshade
okk here we go and is that what that toilet smilie means? Well who knew?!
Well I for one admit that I had a tottaly different idea of what freezing balls off meant but apparantly this appears to come from same source. and this expresion I always presumed brass monkeys had somthing to do with india.oh well we live and learn. Sort of like Sweet FA not standing for what you might think at all but has a rather grisley child murder story behind it :)Quote:
Originally Posted by you ought to be able to guess by now
I have no idea what the toliet smile means, I just found it hilarious! I, too, thought Oriential with the Brass monkey. Get our minds out of the gutter, right? :lol: The next pharaze is:
Where did we get "once in a blue moon?" http://www.websmileys.com/sm/aliens/hae36.gif
well seeing as Im at work without my trusty book :bawling:
Ill just guess itll remind me to find out Blue moon ....humm bet its medieval in origin and somthing to do with the weather
FYI theres another book like the white elephant and red herring book out of course I have to buy it! :D
Here ya go, straight from Uncle John Bathroom Reader Plunges *giggle* Into The Universe, page 320. "It refers to the second full moon within a month--a rare thing indeed. But over the course of a century there'll be 41 months with two full moons, so [once in a blue moon] really means--if you want to get literal--once every 2.4 years." How 'bout that, 'eh? http://www.websmileys.com/sm/dressed/bek040.gifQuote:
Originally Posted by Nightshade
Next: Where did we get the expression: "It's raining cats and dogs?"
I believe we owe that one to Old MacDonalds (alas, he never gets credited for it).Quote:
Next: Where did we get the expression: "It's raining cats and dogs?"
On a particularly gloomy afternoon, the old dear Mac Donalds looks outside his window to discover that it is pouring down. He turns around and says to his beloved cats and dogs (for he used to keep five of each at home) and says 'It is raining, Cats and Dogs!' His wife who happened to be in the kitchen at the time, overhears this and, being a woman of little education, she fails to appreciate the powers of punctuation and thinks that he said 'It is raining cats and dogs'. And next day, she spreads the word around in the town square that 'It rained cats and dogs yesterday' .
Incorrect, Scheherazade, but here's a lovely pink elephant for you: http://www.websmileys.com/sm/animal/460.gifQuote:
Originally Posted by Scheherazade
I was going to say that also, and I'm sure I read it in your distinguished source. My brother is a Uncle John junkie. :)Quote:
Originally Posted by Pendragon
I was so sure that this is how the expression 'raining cats and dogs' had started:Quote:
Originally Posted by Pendragon
Thanks for the elephant anyway! :DQuote:
Originally Posted by Scheherazade
here we go Cats and dogs (Im home so this is more officially sorce....
personally I prefer the first explanaion. :nod:Quote:
Originally Posted by one of the most fantastic books ever written... ooo dear this will be long
Ah, well, according to my, ah, distinguished *giggle* source, dear old Uncle John'sSo ONE of us is right anywhoo!Quote:
In 1600's England it was common practice to discard any waste into the streets--even deceased household pets. Once it rained so much that the now-deceased Tabbies and Fidos became buoyant and floated along the streets, thus inspiring writer Richard Brome in 1651 to record, "It shall rain dogs and polecats."
http://www.websmileys.com/sm/happy/1055.gif
Next Phrase: Where did we get "Saved by the bell"?
I think I know that one without looking somthing to do with boxing depression era america dont quote me though I think ill give someon elsse a try who is this Uncle john? can I meet this person?? or rad this book or whatever???
pleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeees :D
*trying to immitate jay trademare eyelashes big puppy eyes thing* this is not working Ill brinbe you with a choclate instead :D
Yo, Nightshade! Uncle John's Bathroom Reader's are for sale in most bookstores and online from http://www.barnesandnoble.com/ They are full of fun facts. In Britian, he'd probably be called "Uncle Lou". http://www.websmileys.com/sm/happy/422.gifHA!C'ya!Quote:
Originally Posted by Nightshade
I see well ok then I will look into that.
Just to say I did look "saved by the bell up" and although the boxing connection is obvious it is also not correct or at least there is anotheer possible source.......:D
Oh, it's right c'har, me lass! Anybody wanna give 'er a go, or d'yer just wan' th' auld Dragon t'spew it out lioke? http://www.websmileys.com/sm/cartoon/508.gif
okay whats up with the accent Pendragon??
and what "c'har" mean
ohh wait are you saing its right ye'are lass?
anyway Ill do it if you want its not as long a piece as some of the others :D
Got it in one, luv. Dinnae worry aboot me, me ancestors were Brits, I read a lot of British Lit, an' luv t' droive th' blokes 'ere 'bouts barmy wit t' accent. I'm a voice mimic, ya uner'stan'. Gi' 'er a go, then, an' we'll see if we're on th' same bloomin' page! BTW, yer nae deadly Nightshade, are ye lass? ;) (Yeah I know, I mix accents a lot. Stupid Yank!) :brow:
yupp I be that indeed! And mider it be bleedin'not bloomin';)
I thought it was the angles with the name an'all sorry love I been't one for accents I just tend to talk like whatever book im reading at the mo and sine I be reading three set in different places and eras my accent is a shambles!
talk about mixing things up!!
any way wwaht you be want ng is page 214 of my book not me spouting on about accents.
Unfortunatly Im nott lazy to quote it proper
so heres the parphrase
One night in Victorian englang a guard from the Horse Gaurd Parade in London was famously accused of being a sleep on watch (apparantly a big deal) . anyway he denied and sated as proof that h heard Big ben strike 13 at midnight instead of the normal 12 . apparantly because his supposed crime was so bad the clock was checked and they found aclog was out of line causing it to strike 13. he was set free sve by the bell-Big Ben.
FYI in case you didnt know Big ben is the bell not the tower or the clock!
ok were do we get the expression Murphys law
OK. Before I can get to the question on "Murphys law" I need to clarify a few things. Yep, even this old Southern American Boy knew Big Ben was the chime not the clock! And no, that is still not the correct answer for "saved by the bell".
In the days before modern medicine and embalming, it was hard to tell if a person was actually dead, and many feared being buried alive. Corpses were laid out in funeral array for a few days with a string attached to a finger running to a bell. If the person came back to life and moved, the bell rang, and they didn't have to bury him or her. Some took it a step further, being actually buried with the string and bell rigged to their coffin! If that bell rang, they were hastily dug up, some being quite litterally "saved by the bell.", for they were almost smothered!
As to Murphys law, I'll have to look it up! I think it's in the other Uncle John book I have... If not I have several books with weird facts so I'll try to find it! Good choice, Nightshade! Right good show, luv! :)
Now see here Pendragon my answer was not wrong it was merely a probable answer as is the other 2 offerred yours and mine !!
:D
although come to think of it I have heard yours mentioned before.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Nightshade
Ach, lass, dinnae gi' yer kickers in a knot, naow! I be jest funnin' yer, loike! O'course yer answer were as right as mine, to be sure! Two diff'ent sources, thas all! An' 'oo knows, maybe both t'were just bloody shootin' bloind! (Dropping this stupid accent!) As Mulder always says on the X-Files, The Truth is Out There.... :alien: :alien: :alien:
So that's where those expressions came from. Pendragon, where did you find the pink elephant? I love it!
My English Teacher of all ppl told our class where the insult of raising one's middle finger came from. I hope I get it right if not please correct me... Apparently in the olden days I'm not exactly sure when. the penalty for treason was to cut off the offender's middle finger. Therefore in defiance when the king would pass people would stick up their middle figures to insult him.
She also told us where the "F" word came from. Apparently nobel men had the right to sleep with a peasant's wife before she was married. So while the "deed was being done" there was a sign posted on the door of the woman's cottage which said Fornification Under Creedence of the King. Shortened to the Accronym its the word we all know and r shocked to hear.
Ive heard the fornification story before and I suppose the middle finger makessense as in the uk its also a reversed peace sign which comes from the 100 years war and the french cutting off archers fingers.
The Pink Elephant came from here http://www.websmileys.com/ but be warned, not all things are as neat. You have to pick and choose.Quote:
Originally Posted by samercury
Now, Nightshade, about old Murphy's law:
The following article was excerpted from The Desert Wings
March 3, 1978
Murphy's Law ("If anything can go wrong, it will") was born at Edwards Air Force Base in 1949 at North Base.
It was named after Capt. Edward A. Murphy, an engineer working on Air Force Project MX981, (a project) designed to see how much sudden deceleration a person can stand in a crash.
One day, after finding that a transducer was wired wrong, he cursed the technician responsible and said, "If there is any way to do it wrong, he'll find it."
The contractor's project manager kept a list of "laws" and added this one, which he called Murphy's Law.
Actually, what he did was take an old law that had been around for years in a more basic form and give it a name.
That's my story, and I'm sticking to it!
Where did we get the expression: "Can't hold a candle to you"? :idea:
Here:
Another statement:Quote:
CAN'T HOLD A CANDLE TO YOU - ".It goes back to Shakespeare's time, before there was any such thing as street lighting. In those days a person returning home from a tavern or theater would be accompanied by a linkboy, who carried a torch or candle. These linkboys were considered very inferior beings, so to say that Tom couldn't 'hold a candle to ' Harry meant that Tom was very much inferior to Harry." From the "Morris Dictionary of Word and Phrase Origins" by William and Mary Morris (HarperCollins, New York, 1977, 1988).
Quote:
"A phrase dating to the 16th century is "can't hold a candle to," meaning "not fit for comparison to" something clearly superior (as in "Frozen waffles can't hold a candle to the homemade kind"). "To hold a candle to" originally meant to literally assist someone by holding a candle to illuminate the work, i.e., to act as a subordinate. Thus "can't (or "not fit to") hold a candle" meant "not even fit to work as an underling."
I can confirm YellowCrayola's statements as true. Bring on the bananas! :banana: :banana: :banana: However, I await confirmation from Nightshade on Murphy's Law. Right or Wrong, Lassie? :confused: Let's see: Hmm?
Where do we get the phrase "Dyed in the wool"? :)
Pendragon it was right and I know that dyed in the wool is in my book back home but Im typing this on my lunch brake at work so I cant get to it :bawling:
*edit* have you decided to drop the accent then,pendragon also its knickers in a twist not knot ;)
To tell th' truth, luv, wasnae over sure t'was truly an expression 'cross th' whater. 'Sides, lassie, "knickers in a knot" 'tis better alliteration, eh, whot? O're 'ere 'tis "panties/(under)shorts in a wad". That'd be a gud 'un fer our list, don't cha know. Where'd we get th' expression "Dinnae get yer knickers in a twist"? What say, luv? :lol: :lol: :lol: Don't forget folks, the question is: Where did we get the expression : "Dyed in the wool"?Quote:
Originally Posted by Nightshade
akkk, I thought hedsuddenly been struck by sense...my mistake ;)
cant find knickers in a twist I may have to do soome research :banana:
oh you know what Im going to give other peple a chance to reply to the question and if by tommorow its not here Ill do it!1
Sense? Moi? Ye maun be joking! :goof: Dear, dear Nightshade. I must laugh to keep from crying. Laugh and the world will laugh with you, but cry, and you cry all alone... An' mind, lassie, 'tis bitter alone...