stmol32 wrote: » Everyone is wrong it's actually from the Trojan horse story. If you want to check if there's loads of Greeks hiding inside the don't look in the mouth end because there will be a fella waiting with a spear for your eyeball. You're supposed to look underneath for the trapdoor.
LordChessington wrote: » AH has turned into the Ray Darcy show
summerskin wrote: » for fúck's sake, can we not have one single thread without references to politics, recession etc???????? some of us are better off than ever, not everyone is unhappy and fúcked!
Plazaman wrote: » Another one I like was in olden days when it came to wash night (probably once a week if lucky), the tin bath was placed in the middle of the kitchen floor and the man of the house would get to wash first, then the woman of the house and then their children in order of their ages eldest to youngest. All in the same water :eek: By the time the youngest child or baby was to be washed, they'd probably end up even worse than they were as the water was so filthy, whatever was below the surface of the water could not be seen. Hence "Don't throw the baby out with the bath water".
--Kaiser-- wrote: » I call bull****
summerskin wrote: » simple really, better to actually own one item of something, than to potentially own two
Ray Palmer wrote: » Company folds In china they used ribbon to tie manuscripts together. Somebody figure you could fold the paper instead and make a kind of book. This made ribbon companies loose so much business that the expression of a company "folding" came in to use.
--Kaiser-- wrote: » Ahem. It's 'Seize the day'
Ray Palmer wrote: » "Cease the day" is often misunderstood. It is cease the day for you don't know what tomorrow brings. The meaning was learn now because you might not have the chance to do so tomorrow not enjoy yourself now because you won't have the chance tomorrow.
Ray Palmer wrote: » "Cease the day" is often misunderstood.
Ray Palmer wrote: » Cats and dogs would sleep in the thatched roofs. When it rained so heavily the thatch would become so wet the cats and dogs would lose their footing and fall off. Hence it is raining "cats and dogs"
davet82 wrote: » 'Its raining cats and dogs' Did this ever really happen? :rolleyes:
--Kaiser-- wrote: » That's a common but unlikely explanationhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_whole_nine_yardshttp://www.snopes.com/language/phrases/nineyards.asp
Love-struck Andy McTavish sets off to visit his fiancée while well into his cups. He wears a kilt his mother has woven for him which was made of 1 yard of cloth instead of the normal 9. In his excitement and drunkenness he manages to slam the door on that item of clothing, thereby pulling it from his person and leaving him naked underneath his cloak. He arrives at his fiancées home in the middle of the night and wakes her by throwing stones at her window. Once she appears at the window he throws off his cloak revealing his full male glory (unbeknownst to him). He asks if she likes what she sees, the gal, blushingly, replies that she does, at which McTavish proudly says “Well lass, that’s nothing! I’ve 8 more yards at home!”
pitythefool wrote: » That is brilliant on so many levels in relation to my post Thanks Captain Obvious
antodeco wrote: » And where "the greeks invented gays" Something to do with a load of loads being inside a horse. Wait, thats beastiality..
Interestingly the phrase 'on the wagon' stems from another tradition that took place on [the last journey of a condemned-to-death prisoner in London]. At Queen Matilda's ( wife of Henry I) bequest a cup of charity was given to the condemned as they travelled towards their death. Originally this was given at St Giles-in-the-Fields, a leper hospital until 1539 (it became a church in 1547). Then it became a custom that Bow tavern gave a pint of ale to each condemned person. Commonly used to describe abstaining from alcohol, one theory states that the phrase developed because prisonsers were put back on the wagon, never to drink again. Another theory goes that the executioner stayed on the wagon the whole time, as they were not invited into the tavern.
cocobear wrote: » "Rule of thumb" Originated with Miller's, they would take the ground flour between their thumb and index finger to test how coarse it was
summerskin wrote: » The Whole Nine Yards Not an American sports reference as many believe, but a reference to the "belt" of ammunition used by airforce gunners in WW2, which were nine yards long. Giving them "the whole nine yards" meant basically trying to blast the enemy to smithereens.