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Sayings...And where do they originate from

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By (user no longer on site) OP     over a year ago

Almost everyday we use or hear other people say a well known saying, but where do they originate from, for example,

1 - Butter wouldn't melt

2 - Not enough room to swing a cat

3 - Chuffed as nuts

4 - Donkeys years

5 - Cheesed off

6 - Oh fiddle sticks

7 - Full of beans

8 - Its not my cup of tea

9 - On your bike

10- Its all gone pear shaped

Would love to know where some of these originated from

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By *issBehavingxxWoman  over a year ago

Glasgow

Apparently "Donkeys Years" came from Donkeys Ears... as donkeys ears are long.. but has since become donkeys years

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

donkeys years started out as rhyming slang as Donkeys ears

eg 'I ain't seen you for donkeys'

donkeys/donkeys ears/years

It changed to donkeys years somewhere along the way

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By (user no longer on site) OP     over a year ago

I think swing a cat comes from sailors in cramped cabins, that had women of ill repute (shall we say lol) visiting the sailors

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

[Removed by poster at 25/10/12 18:28:19]

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"I think swing a cat comes from sailors in cramped cabins, that had women of ill repute (shall we say lol) visiting the sailors"

not enough room to swing a cat o nine tails..a whip

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By *he_original_poloWoman  over a year ago

a Primark shoebox in Leicester

1 - Butter wouldn't melt - someone shagging bodies at the morgue, trying to recreate Last Tango in Paris

2 - Not enough room to swing a cat.... a small Eastend pub.

3 - Chuffed as nuts....... the performing chimps, a bag of peanuts and anal play.

4 - Donkeys years..... how long it takes a whopper to get fully hard.

5 - Cheesed off.... a car park blow-job on a lunch break.

6 - Oh fiddle sticks.... crutches used to make a false claim for benefits.

7 - Full of beans...... fanny farts.

8 - Its not my cup of tea..... mixing up drinks spiked with rohypnol.

9 - On your bike... not a pleasant term used to describe someone's wife.

10- Its all gone pear shaped.... most arses over 35.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

Full of beans:- lively and energetic.... Horses were given beans as fodder.... The owners noticed a heightened amount of activity after being fed beans, hence the saying full of beans

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By (user no longer on site) OP     over a year ago


"

1 - Butter wouldn't melt - someone shagging bodies at the morgue, trying to recreate Last Tango in Paris

2 - Not enough room to swing a cat.... a small Eastend pub.

3 - Chuffed as nuts....... the performing chimps, a bag of peanuts and anal play.

4 - Donkeys years..... how long it takes a whopper to get fully hard.

5 - Cheesed off.... a car park blow-job on a lunch break.

6 - Oh fiddle sticks.... crutches used to make a false claim for benefits.

7 - Full of beans...... fanny farts.

8 - Its not my cup of tea..... mixing up drinks spiked with rohypnol.

9 - On your bike... not a pleasant term used to describe someone's wife.

10- Its all gone pear shaped.... most arses over 35.

"

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

I know it doesn't answer anything right now but there's a brilliant book called All Gong and No Dinner which is all about sayings like that. Wish I'd made note of the funny one liners my Grandad used to say before he died

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

1. Of French origin it looks like: Here's a citation from 1530, in Jehan Palsgrave's Lesclarcissement de la langue françoyse:

"He maketh as thoughe butter wolde nat melte in his mouthe."

2. Donkey's years looks more likely to be donkey's ears ..

It is quite likely that donkey's ears was the earlier form and that it originated as rhyming slang, in an allusion to the length of the animal's ears. Donkey's ears/years is often shortened just to donkeys. That is characteristic of rhyming slang, as in syrup (of figs) - wig or plates (of meat) - feet.

Fiddlesticks.

From the Shakespearean proverb fiddlesticks meant something not worth attention, to fiddle around doing nothing, since the instrument is used in fiddling, hence the implication is that the fiddlestick is even less than the fiddle. Fiddlesticks took on it's more humorous beat in 1701 when George Farquhar used in his play Sir Henry Wildair : "Golden pleasures! golden fiddlesticks!". After this it was a quick jump from a disparaging word about idleness to the current synonym for nonsense. What it all boils down to is much ado about nothing.

Not my cup of tea:

People or things with which one felt an affinity began to be called 'my cup of tea' in the 1930s. Nancy Mitford appears to be the first to record that term in print, in the comic novel Christmas Pudding, 1932:

I'm not at all sure I wouldn't rather marry Aunt Loudie. She's even more my cup of tea in many ways.

In keeping with the high regard for tea, most of the early references to 'a cup of tea' as a description of an acquaintance are positive ones, i.e. 'nice', 'good', 'strong' etc. The expression is more often used in the 'not my cup of tea' form these days. This negative usage began in WWII. An early example of it is found in Hal Boyle's Leaves From a War Correspondent's Notebook column, which described English life and manners for an American audience. The column provided the American counterpart to Alister Cooke's Letter from America and was syndicated in various US papers. In 1944, he wrote:

[In England] You don't say someone gives you a pain in the neck. You just remark "He's not my cup of tea."

It's all gone pear shaped ...

Loads of possibles from a wide variety of professions to explain this one:

Here are just a few possible origins of the phrase:

The shape of a graph of probability in which there are a lot of extreme outcomes, distorting the data and making relatively-improbable events more statistically likely.

• A badly-thrown circular pot.

• A badly-blown glass ball.

• A badly-blown cathode ray tube.

• A badly made ship’s rivet, which has been allowed to cool badly.

• Two-day old party balloons which become saggy over time. Also Victorian gas balloons which do likewise.

• RAF pilots in the 1940s failing to achieve a perfect mid-air loop.

• Aircraft engines becoming distorted over time.

• A gun barrel failing, and becoming swollen as the pressure buckles the metal.

• Worn or badly-made metal bearings in large stationary engines.

• A crashed bi-plane, which buckles into guess what? A pear shape.

• A person who’s put weight on, but mainly in their lower half (sincerely doubt this is the one).

I did some research on this to save people some time -- credit to various sayings websites I looked this up on.

Thanks xx

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"

1 - Butter wouldn't melt - someone shagging bodies at the morgue, trying to recreate Last Tango in Paris

2 - Not enough room to swing a cat.... a small Eastend pub.

3 - Chuffed as nuts....... the performing chimps, a bag of peanuts and anal play.

4 - Donkeys years..... how long it takes a whopper to get fully hard.

5 - Cheesed off.... a car park blow-job on a lunch break.

6 - Oh fiddle sticks.... crutches used to make a false claim for benefits.

7 - Full of beans...... fanny farts.

8 - Its not my cup of tea..... mixing up drinks spiked with rohypnol.

9 - On your bike... not a pleasant term used to describe someone's wife.

10- Its all gone pear shaped.... most arses over 35.

"

I did smile x

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By *ctavius StuntMan  over a year ago

london


"I think swing a cat comes from sailors in cramped cabins, that had women of ill repute (shall we say lol) visiting the sailors"
the saying refers to a "cat o nine tails" and the crampped cabin conditions on board ship.

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By *ctavius StuntMan  over a year ago

london

"Berk". A non offensive name to call someone whoever they might be, police officer or an MP. You'll get away with it. However "Berk" comes from rhyming slang for "Berkshire hunt" = "cunt"

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By *icketysplitsWoman  over a year ago

Way over Yonder, that's where I'm bound

Don't give a damn should be don't give a dam. It refers to an Indian coin.

To say dam, that hurt should be damn, that hurt.

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