@Okie wrote:
I thought of one ... "There's more than one way to skin a cat."
On that note, I ran across the article below from PETA.
[www.peta.org]
@guysmom wrote:
OK, I'll start............I just had a big stretch on the couch and said out loud to no one in particular, Oh dear, bread and beer, if I were rich I wouldn't be here....I heard my mom say than many many times when I was a child. I have no idea where that came from.
She would also frequently say, Nitey-nite, sleep tight, don't let the bedbugs bite!. I don't know where that one came from, but I can only guess that she was a child in the 1920's, and perhaps her mom said that to her children during a time when perhaps sanitary measures were not as strict as they are now.
Anyone else have quirky sayings they've heard through their lives??
@cjbstar wrote:
Don't throw the baby out with the bath water. Before plumbing most people would take a bath once week. The Father first, the mom second, the children in order of their ages. By the baby's turn the water was dark and murky.
It wasn't until after my walk today that community pools came creeping into my mind, and I remembered reading this.@wrosie wrote:
Recycling at its finest.@cjbstar wrote:
Don't throw the baby out with the bath water. Before plumbing most people would take a bath once week. The Father first, the mom second, the children in order of their ages. By the baby's turn the water was dark and murky.
@wrosie wrote:
I saw this in another thread and believe it is incorrect.
"Cut off my nose despite my face". Could be auto correct, who knows.
" I know it as "cut off my nose TO SPITE my face". Which makes more sense to me.
Not sure how it originated.
That was interesting to read, @shopnyc. To think you hadn't heard it in 20 years until this British guy said it....I can imagine that it did indeed stir up memories! BTW, my mom has been gone 24 years now, so I haven't heard anyone saying those things, either (except myself!). But the sayings seem to stay with us over the years anyhow!@shopnyc wrote:
Anyway, my mother's been gone for 20 years and I hadn't heard anyone say it in at least that long -- until just the other day! A British guy on YouTube said it about himself: "I must look like the wreck of the Hesperus!" That really caught my attention!
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Not sure if you're familiar with Chris Simms, but does NFL coverage for NBC. He botches/misuses words and phrases often, but it comes out hilarious. His co-host razz him about it. Known as Simms-ism's!@Boutique wrote:
My sister was the queen of getting old phrases wrong (and got very angry if you corrected her). She tried to use the old phrase - stuck in my craw but she said it as - "It got stuck in my crawl". I always wanted to ask her what a "crawl" was ... but didn't dare.
LOL!