Talking about walking past tramps in the street. My mate and I were walking past a bloke in his sleeping bag sleeping in a doorway and he asked my mate if he had a spare cigarette. To which my mate responds. " No, and you shouldn't be smoking in bed anyhow "When we drove past a tramp, dad would say 'I wonder how Ken is?' (his brother)
Reminds me of “what did your last servant die of?”If you asked my mother to do something for you and she thought I was being too lazy to do it myself, she would say. " Away and pee up ma kilt "
Interestingly there's two very different versions of the meaning.One my gran used to say (if something broke) “Well, that’s gone for a burton.”
A bit like me dear Old Dad, we could all tell when he was fibbing or had been caught out because he would rub his nose between his thumb and forefinger. It was brilliant to watch him trying to convince my Mum. Such happy days xxMy gran used to say to me “I know you are fibbing, I can see your eyes spinning round”
But Gran (RIP), it really wasn’t me who ate all the biscuits!
Slight variation on what I constantly find myself using with my young kids is " what did your last slave die of?" Trying to explain to an 8 year old proved to be challengingReminds me of “what did your last servant die of?”
Off topic a bit, but I can remember my shock when my granddad said something rude when he first told me "a dirty joke", he always seemed so "polite" until then.I can remember back in the late 1960s being amazed when my mother said something rude!
my parents ran a shop, and one day she was talking to one of the “ travellers” - remember them - and she said in the course of conversation “every little helps………”. They then talked about how that expression ended, and my mother said “…… said the old woman who peed in the sea”.
pretty tame by todays standards, and travellers was travelling salesmen, not people who move around the country in caravans.
Another possible explanation is that it stemmed from a 1930s Advertising campaign by a brewery, but no actual proof has been foundInterestingly there's two very different versions of the meaning.
1. WWII training aircrew in Blackpool if they failed the exam, Morse code in particular, they would be reassigned to rear gunner (life expectancy as we know poor). The training for this was done at a billiards hall in Blackpool called Burtons.
2. Literally going down the pub to get drunk with reference to Burton being the brewery town.
I used to have a book of old phases and how they have changed, normally by people not understanding the original correctly.
Jack of all trades, meant just that, a person competent to carry out many tasks. Master of none was a later addition in the 19th century. The second part which obviously means the opposite to the original is now not said often so "Jack of all trades" alone has become a criticism of someone's ability.
People just don't know how to tow the line anymore.Interestingly there's two very different versions of the meaning.
1. WWII training aircrew in Blackpool if they failed the exam, Morse code in particular, they would be reassigned to rear gunner (life expectancy as we know poor). The training for this was done at a billiards hall in Blackpool called Burtons.
2. Literally going down the pub to get drunk with reference to Burton being the brewery town.
I used to have a book of old phases and how they have changed, normally by people not understanding the original correctly.
Jack of all trades, meant just that, a person competent to carry out many tasks. Master of none was a later addition in the 19th century. The second part which obviously means the opposite to the original is now not said often so "Jack of all trades" alone has become a criticism of someone's ability.
Agreed the bitter end is nighPeople just don't know how to tow the line anymore.