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Phrases you don't hear anymore: (Original Post) Buttoneer Saturday OP
A friend laughed at me the other day when I said walkingman Saturday #1
"No one says 'rubbers' anymore" JoseBalow Saturday #13
That's just swell. dchill Saturday #77
A generation prior to me called them "safes" TexLaProgressive Saturday #111
Alas, I don't think people say "Gee Whiz" any more Stargleamer Saturday #2
I like to use antiquated phrases. johnp3907 Saturday #3
Me, too. It's fun. Iggo Saturday #89
You must live for September 19 each year. soldierant Sunday #149
Aarh. Iggo Sunday #165
I remember my mother... Pluvious Saturday #98
Hey, that was my dad's first job! (n/t) Iggo Sunday #166
"Groovy, man." Dave Bowman Saturday #4
Far out, man. calguy Saturday #84
Rumpy-pumpy chowder66 Saturday #5
wotcha! UK Shellback Squid Saturday #6
I'm gonna... WestMichRad Saturday #7
Holy cow. Never understood it but but always thought cows somehow deserved a phrase like that. dgauss Saturday #8
My daughter says that all the time radical noodle Saturday #10
"Holy cow" lost a major proponent True Dough Saturday #16
Phil Rizzuto always used Holy Cow Sanity Claws Saturday #47
Baseball Hall of Famer displacedvermoter Saturday #52
Carey enid602 Saturday #107
You're joking, right? True Dough Saturday #110
Confusion enid602 Sunday #137
Ah, I see. True Dough Sunday #139
And the great uncle of Mariah Carey. FSogol Sunday #155
Isn't that Hindu? n/t malthaussen Saturday #90
Never thought of that. From Wikipedia: dgauss Saturday #109
My husband is doing his best to keep... 3catwoman3 Saturday #9
My cousin's maiden name was Keene Nittersing Saturday #38
Mature Republican RainCaster Saturday #11
Phonograph and record player. rubbersole Saturday #12
Add LP and 45 to that. wnylib Saturday #18
Try "spindle." Some of the earliest records were wax cylinders. royable Saturday #19
And yet... Pluvious Saturday #99
My late ex had every Elvis, Beatles, Baez etc. LP and 45 ever made. rubbersole Saturday #106
They could be very lucky indeed... Pluvious Saturday #112
When moving, the one that caught my eye... rubbersole Saturday #116
This message was self-deleted by its author Chin music Saturday #14
I wonder if the dog sled driver was supposed to yorkster Saturday #67
This message was self-deleted by its author Chin music Saturday #74
I too have heard by jingo in the wayback of my yorkster Saturday #82
Should add that I read those books so long ago, yorkster Saturday #75
This message was self-deleted by its author Chin music Saturday #78
Wurlitzer Keepthesoulalive Saturday #15
Family Friends Had One ProfessorGAC Saturday #94
There is still a Wurlitzer Keepthesoulalive Saturday #124
Oh, The Giant Pipe Organ ProfessorGAC Saturday #125
Here are a few: True Dough Saturday #17
My late boyfriend, named Bob used to say Bob'syour uncle Walleye Saturday #21
Dropping a dime sdfernando Saturday #103
"Bob's your uncle"! whathehell Saturday #105
Drop a dime on someone MaryMagdaline Saturday #57
There are still pay phones in the US Wiz Imp Saturday #132
I still say Six of one; half dozen of the other. So does Mr YD nt yellowdogintexas Monday #176
Bull in a china shop. wnylib Saturday #20
"Don't use my good scissors" JohnnyRingo Saturday #41
that depends If there is a person who likes to sew in the house yellowdogintexas Monday #178
Hahahaaa! That was my mom on rare occasion... electric_blue68 Monday #190
About a decade ago I promoted my good china PoindexterOglethorpe Saturday #43
Nice! I use mine as well. Also the silver. Keeps it sparkly MaryMagdaline Saturday #55
Never got the good silver, unfortuately. If I had PoindexterOglethorpe Saturday #62
I sold my Grand Baroque patterned sterling silver set I inherited from my mother. Nodody polishes silver any more. CTyankee Saturday #81
my mom had her mother's sterling which was a very old pattern yellowdogintexas Monday #179
I say Bull in a china shop quite often and yes I have not one but two sets of fine china yellowdogintexas Monday #177
My mother also had a set of fine china from my brother wnylib Monday #184
Momisms from my mom: 10 Turtle Day Saturday #22
my mom had some weird sayings. Can't remember all them, but pants were britches. LeftInTX Monday #186
My mom called Earl_from_PA Saturday #23
Mine too! Nittersing Saturday #40
My English husband calls it "bum fodder" iwillalwayswonderwhy Saturday #54
Abbreviated "BUMF," should you ever encounter that word. n/t malthaussen Saturday #91
Monkey Business Phentex Saturday #24
Well I'll be a Monkey's Uncle !! Pluvious Saturday #100
Now that reminds me of a science fiction story soldierant Sunday #150
Colder than a well diggers ass. Emile Saturday #25
Thermometer? Wicked Blue Saturday #53
LOL picturing my mother-in-law holding a thermometer Emile Saturday #58
That was one of my dad's favorites too jmowreader Sunday #145
LOL, sounds just like what my mother-in-law used to say. Emile Sunday #147
Cool beans! Lars39 Saturday #26
Right on surfered Saturday #27
Far out. Groovy. Ocelot II Saturday #28
thats what I was thinking. peacebuzzard Saturday #126
Bitchen DBoon Sunday #153
Back 40 lark Saturday #29
We still call the back corner of our yard cksmithy Saturday #73
Tons of ranching and agriculture in CA, so it would make sense they'd use it too, lark Sunday #140
I grew up in Texas and we said "Hot damn" a lot... CTyankee Saturday #123
My son says it. LeftInTX Monday #187
Easy Peasy NT macwriter Saturday #30
I hate that phrase. JohnnyRingo Saturday #39
I have a friend who likes it soldierant Sunday #151
Easy Peasy Lemon Squeezy Niagara Saturday #70
Par for the course. Diamond_Dog Saturday #31
I remember that "wake up and smell the coffee" got new life... Pluvious Saturday #101
I will have to ask Mr. Diamond Diamond_Dog Saturday #118
I might be miss remembering... Pluvious Sunday #142
I don't know if Ann Landers originated that phrase Diamond_Dog Sunday #143
A bit more background on the phrase Pluvious Sunday #144
Ann Landers and Dear Abby ("Abigail van Buren") soldierant Sunday #154
Some I wish I never heard again like "My Bad", calling a movie a "Flick", "Dude" doc03 Saturday #32
A big YES to all of those, doc03! Diamond_Dog Saturday #44
Gonna sit right down and right me a letter! chouchou Saturday #33
Can we add "it is what it is"? JohnnyRingo Saturday #34
It depends on what the meaning of the word is is! Zambero Saturday #42
Very 90's & 00's to me underpants Saturday #79
Hate that expression MaryMagdaline Saturday #95
I hear this from one of my housemates and no one else. nocoincidences Saturday #35
we both say "That's My Story and I am sticking to it" . nt yellowdogintexas Monday #180
Land o' Goshen! ... and "Republicans are the party of fiscal reasonability" JohnnyRingo Saturday #36
The Bees Knees Zambero Saturday #37
Spinster. greatauntoftriplets Saturday #45
Goes with #31 - "old maid"... rubbersole Saturday #71
"Dial a phone number" sop Saturday #46
"Out in the tules." hunter Saturday #48
Perhaps not politically correct and... icnorth Saturday #49
"loyal opposition" marble falls Saturday #50
I use so many of these ! ShepKat Saturday #51
Big Hairy Deal iwillalwayswonderwhy Saturday #56
Faaaaar freaking out Wicked Blue Saturday #59
I still say "bummer." Diamond_Dog Saturday #65
Me too Wicked Blue Saturday #69
In college in the late sixties we actually made fun of ourselves by saying "farm out" and "out of state"..... EarnestPutz Saturday #122
Keep on Trucking soldierant Sunday #157
Malarkey and shenanigans have come back MaryMagdaline Saturday #60
Character matters. keithbvadu2 Saturday #61
There's one I wish would go away, well a few, but " threw up in my mouth a little" takes the cake, so to speak. yorkster Saturday #63
Sealed with a Kiss. patphil Saturday #64
A dime a dozen Clouds Passing Saturday #66
Mano-Manaschevitz! bif Saturday #68
😂. That's a good one, I forgot about that! Diamond_Dog Saturday #72
Takes two to tango Marthe48 Saturday #76
Always heard the hands one as.... getagrip_already Saturday #80
"Play fast and loose" goes back to medieval times soldierant Sunday #159
Interesting Marthe48 Sunday #161
"Hot diggity dog!" CTyankee Saturday #83
This message was self-deleted by its author comradebillyboy Saturday #85
Jimminy Cricket, golly jeezers. bless your little heart. erronis Saturday #86
"Bless Your Heart will never go away as long as there are still Southern grand mothers. !!! nt yellowdogintexas Monday #182
Let's see... OldBaldy1701E Saturday #87
This message was self-deleted by its author Prairie_Seagull Saturday #88
"Built like a brick outhouse" malthaussen Saturday #92
In certain circumstances, soldierant Sunday #168
Didn't know that! n/t malthaussen Sunday #174
Heavens to murgatroid (OMG) crud Saturday #93
Wasn't it Mr Magoo that said it ? Pluvious Saturday #114
Might've been Snagglepuss. Iggo Sunday #167
This message was self-deleted by its author Kaleva Saturday #96
No one today would say... Pluvious Saturday #97
"Not on your tintype!" LisaM Saturday #102
Does anyone else find this thread somewhat depressing? EarnestPutz Saturday #104
That could explain why... Pluvious Saturday #115
You make a very good point. EarnestPutz Saturday #121
I would certainly recommend it soldierant Sunday #171
Not really - soldierant Sunday #169
Calling person to person mobeau69 Saturday #108
Good golly miss molly ! Pluvious Saturday #113
"Woo doggies" was his phrase LeftInTX Monday #188
The Life of Riley Niagara Saturday #117
"The Life of Riley" was a 1950s TV show. Jeebo Sunday #136
I have a neighbor that had a previous dog before it succumbed to an age related illness Niagara Sunday #146
If any of us were holding my Mom up mercuryblues Saturday #119
This may date me a tad bit: "The British are coming!" GreenWave Saturday #120
OK, that got a LOL from me. soldierant Sunday #170
Let's split kimbutgar Saturday #127
Haven't heard that in ages. (60's-70's) LeftInTX Monday #189
Cold weather WmChris Saturday #128
I like Lima Beans. debm55 Saturday #129
Cutting the cheese happybird Saturday #130
Swell! if..fish..had..wings Saturday #131
"That really burns my cork." 3catwoman3 Sunday #133
Like a monkey fucking a football MichMan Sunday #134
Everything's hunky-dory. Jeebo Sunday #135
Wasn't that about the time period that "copacetic" wa current too? soldierant Sunday #173
still say copacetic from time to time. It was a favorite of my grandfather! nt yellowdogintexas Monday #181
Bill "Bojangles" Robinson loved the word and used it frequently. soldierant Monday #183
"It's all the go" marigold20 Sunday #138
nobody says this anymore... SonOfNebanaube Sunday #141
In like Flynn. Buttoneer Sunday #148
Snug as a bug in a rug. Golden Raisin Sunday #152
"Include a self-addressed stamped envelope." Prof. Toru Tanaka Sunday #156
I still use "chasing the dime" even though it was outdated FSogol Sunday #158
Not to worry DeeDeeNY Sunday #160
"Wicked pissah" Submariner Sunday #162
"Would you like me to check under the hood?" madamesilverspurs Sunday #163
Useless as teats on a boar pig. CanonRay Sunday #164
I use that one, a bit different: "useless as tits on a boar hog." raccoon Monday #191
I have several such as moniss Sunday #172
Here's one we don't hear any more. C0RI0LANUS Monday #175
Gay and carefree meaning the same thing. As in the "The Gay Divorcee" LeftInTX Monday #185

walkingman

(8,555 posts)
1. A friend laughed at me the other day when I said
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 01:03 AM
Saturday

I need to put on my britches - instead of pants.

No one says "rubbers" anymore - condoms.

Stargleamer

(2,261 posts)
2. Alas, I don't think people say "Gee Whiz" any more
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 01:07 AM
Saturday

I kind of miss it. "Only trouble is, Gee Whiz. . . ."



johnp3907

(3,915 posts)
3. I like to use antiquated phrases.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 01:12 AM
Saturday

Like “Gonna grab something outta the icebox and chill in front of the Dumont.”

Iggo

(48,540 posts)
89. Me, too. It's fun.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 02:01 PM
Saturday

On the regular I use blimey, sure and begorah, shiver me timbers…

Stuff like that.

Pluvious

(4,809 posts)
98. I remember my mother...
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 02:54 PM
Saturday

... telling how when she was a little girl, the ice man would give them a few ice slivers as a treat in the summertime

dgauss

(1,141 posts)
8. Holy cow. Never understood it but but always thought cows somehow deserved a phrase like that.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 01:42 AM
Saturday

radical noodle

(8,823 posts)
10. My daughter says that all the time
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 01:54 AM
Saturday

But she's a teacher so has to watch what she says. The kids love that phrase and giggle when she says it.

Sanity Claws

(22,062 posts)
47. Phil Rizzuto always used Holy Cow
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 10:15 AM
Saturday

Rizzuto was an announcer for the New York Yankees for ages. I think he retired in the 1980s.

True Dough

(20,892 posts)
110. You're joking, right?
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 03:44 PM
Saturday

Because they are not father/son.

Hard to tell via the innerwebz, but maybe you meant that in jest.

enid602

(9,089 posts)
137. Confusion
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 05:56 AM
Sunday

The photo posted was not Harry Carey (American actor), but rather Harry Caray (né Carabina), Chicago sportscaster. Confusion indeed.

True Dough

(20,892 posts)
139. Ah, I see.
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 08:15 AM
Sunday

Having the same name does not help matters! I'm unfamiliar with the actor, at least without doing some research.

dgauss

(1,141 posts)
109. Never thought of that. From Wikipedia:
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 03:42 PM
Saturday
"Holy cow!" (and other similar terms), an exclamation of surprise used mostly in the United States, Canada, Australia, and England, is a minced oath or euphemism. The expression dates to at latest 1905.[1] Its earliest known appearance was in a tongue-in-cheek letter to the editor of the Minneapolis Journal: "A lover of the cow writes to this column to protest against a certain variety of Hindu oath having to do with the vain use of the name of the milk producer. There is the profane exclamations, 'holy cow!' and, 'By the stomach of the eternal cow!'"[2] The phrase appears to have been adopted as a means to avoid using obscene or indecent language and may have been based on a general awareness of the holiness of cows in some religious traditions, particularly Hinduism.[1]

It may also have been adapted from a Gaelic phrase, holy cathu, meaning "holy sorrow."[3]


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy_cow_(expression)

royable

(1,375 posts)
19. Try "spindle." Some of the earliest records were wax cylinders.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 06:15 AM
Saturday

You mounted the cylinder on a spindle that spun, and lowered the record needle on a pivot to touch the rotatiing outside of the cylinder. The needle fed the sound to a big horn hanging from an arm over the spindle. So, no turning table.

Pluvious

(4,809 posts)
99. And yet...
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 03:00 PM
Saturday

Some people are trying to keep it alive...

( there is a surprisingly vibrant secondhand market for vinyl albums, I was shocked at how much money I got dumping my old ones at the recycled records store )


rubbersole

(8,719 posts)
106. My late ex had every Elvis, Beatles, Baez etc. LP and 45 ever made.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 03:28 PM
Saturday

Our kids are not selling any of her vast (500+) collection of early '60s through '80s vinyl. They consider it a retirement investment. I was amazed at the demand.

Pluvious

(4,809 posts)
112. They could be very lucky indeed...
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 04:12 PM
Saturday

Depending upon the rarity and condition

During my research on the resellability of them, I saw some staggering prices paid for some
of the most rare and sought after ones

rubbersole

(8,719 posts)
116. When moving, the one that caught my eye...
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 04:47 PM
Saturday

...was a red translucent 45 Elvis record with a Sun Records label. Not mint but very unique. Might be worth a bag of groceries someday 😌.

Response to Buttoneer (Original post)

yorkster

(2,523 posts)
67. I wonder if the dog sled driver was supposed to
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 11:16 AM
Saturday

be Scandinavian. Maybe I'm thinking of
"Yumpin' yiminy!".

Response to yorkster (Reply #67)

yorkster

(2,523 posts)
82. I too have heard by jingo in the wayback of my
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 12:50 PM
Saturday

childhood...or maybe an old movie on TCM.

yorkster

(2,523 posts)
75. Should add that I read those books so long ago,
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 12:07 PM
Saturday

that I only have a dim memory of them.
Good reads. I was about 14 or so and definitely was drawn by the titles...The Call of the Wild, The Sea Wolf, etc. Who could resist...

Response to yorkster (Reply #75)

ProfessorGAC

(70,636 posts)
94. Family Friends Had One
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 02:27 PM
Saturday

Console organ. A million buttons and switches plus a rhythm box. But, I sounded weak compared to my dad's Hammond.
One of the schools where I sub has a Wurlizter piano. Not in very good shape, but the guy they bring in can still tune it. Wurlitzer never had good action, but their spinets were very affordable so lots of people had them. Like my aunt & uncle.
There was a store in the town where I grew up that was all Wurlitzer & Fender.
After Gibson bought Baldwin, who bought Wurlitzer, they quit making instruments with that name on them.
Their only products appear to be jukeboxes.

Keepthesoulalive

(813 posts)
124. There is still a Wurlitzer
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 08:01 PM
Saturday

At Radio City Music Hall. When I was younger they would turn the lights on over it and then the Rockettes would come out.

ProfessorGAC

(70,636 posts)
125. Oh, The Giant Pipe Organ
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 09:17 PM
Saturday

I read a book about those huge theater organs made by Wurlizter & Kimball.
In fact, I'm pretty sure that the RCMA organ was the Kimball design & layout but built by Wurlizter.
I got to play a big pipe organ a couple of times when I was a kid. 12 or 13 y/o as I recall.
When the volume pedal is pushed, you can just feel the sound.

True Dough

(20,892 posts)
17. Here are a few:
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 04:28 AM
Saturday

Making whoopee

Jive turkey

Here's a dime. Call somebody who cares. (A dime ain't getting you much of anything these days.)

As nervous as a long tailed cat in a room full of rockers

You bet your sweet bippy!

Six of one, half a dozen of the other (My dad used to say that a lot.)

Bob's your uncle

Walleye

(36,439 posts)
21. My late boyfriend, named Bob used to say Bob'syour uncle
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 07:00 AM
Saturday

And my mom loved six of 1/2 a dozen of the other. And kids today probably wonder where the expression “drop a dime on somebody” came from

sdfernando

(5,427 posts)
103. Dropping a dime
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 03:16 PM
Saturday

has a whole different meaning nowadays…all together (gratuitous Airplane reference).

And who says “nowadays” anymore??

whathehell

(29,875 posts)
105. "Bob's your uncle"!
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 03:24 PM
Saturday

That's British slang, I believe...I first heard it on a British TV series and found it hillarious!

Wiz Imp

(2,471 posts)
132. There are still pay phones in the US
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 11:08 PM
Saturday

but there are less than 100000 left.

https://electronics.howstuffworks.com/pay-phones-coming-back-free.htm

There Are Still Many Phoneless People

The slow death of the pay phone has been harder for some people than for others. Though the vast majority of Americans now own some kind of cell phone, there are still some — including impoverished or unhoused people — who depend on the availability of public pay phones.

In some cities, innovators are working to solve the problem. Futel is a project based in Portland, Oregon, that updates old pay phones to provide free calls and voicemail. It has eight outdoor, pay phone-style phones in Portland, plus one in Long Beach, Washington, and one each in Ypsilanti and Detroit, Michigan. "Denial of telephony services has long been a tactic used against undesirable populations," write Futel's founders, "and our devices will counteract that."

In Philadelphia, an "amateur phone collective" called PhilTel is doing more than just preserving old pay phones: They're installing new ones, minus the "pay" part. The project aims to create a network of phones that make free calls anywhere in North America.


though I guess if they're free, they're no longer payphones.

wnylib

(24,803 posts)
20. Bull in a china shop.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 06:22 AM
Saturday

Last edited Sat Dec 21, 2024, 11:27 AM - Edit history (1)

I said that once in front of some younger people who had no clue what I meant. Seems to me that it is self-explanitary, but perhaps they never heard of a china shop.

Speaking of china, who says they are using the "good china" any more? How many people still have a set of china?



yellowdogintexas

(22,819 posts)
178. that depends If there is a person who likes to sew in the house
Mon Dec 23, 2024, 01:45 AM
Monday

you will hear the scissors comment!

electric_blue68

(18,739 posts)
190. Hahahaaa! That was my mom on rare occasion...
Mon Dec 23, 2024, 05:20 AM
Monday

She had gone to dressmaking school after HS in NYC.

She was a fabulous sewer! She knew enough from her design courses to alter things. She might have designed here & there, maybe more before she was married.

Our clothes often had the qualities of looking like they came from Sak's Fifth Ave! 😄 🥰

PoindexterOglethorpe

(26,848 posts)
43. About a decade ago I promoted my good china
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 09:55 AM
Saturday

to being my every day china. I love it. I'm only sorry I didn't do it years earlier. The pattern is Royal Doulton Tonkin.

CTyankee

(65,300 posts)
81. I sold my Grand Baroque patterned sterling silver set I inherited from my mother. Nodody polishes silver any more.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 12:46 PM
Saturday

I got $1,300 for the entire collection. Gorgeous pattern but too hard to keep up any more.

yellowdogintexas

(22,819 posts)
179. my mom had her mother's sterling which was a very old pattern
Mon Dec 23, 2024, 01:49 AM
Monday

I can't remember the name of it but she did use it. She also had her mother's everyday silver plate which was what we used most of the time.

I have a (now discontinued) heavy weight Oneida set of stainless which I love and it really pisses me off that it was discontinued. Of course I received all of the silver plate pattern I picked out with the first marriage and still have it.

yellowdogintexas

(22,819 posts)
177. I say Bull in a china shop quite often and yes I have not one but two sets of fine china
Mon Dec 23, 2024, 01:41 AM
Monday

One was mine which was mostly wedding presents from my first wedding. The other set belonged to Mr YD's mother. He brought it to her from Hong Kong when he was in the Navy. That was the one thing she wanted when he asked her what she might like him to bring her. The two sets are very similar: white with platinum rims. I have used them from time to time, when I had folks over for a nice dinner.

We also have a set of Mikasa Italian Countryside which I love! It is a beautiful white and looks nice enough to dress up for a company dinner,

The last time I had my china out, I had the entire family over for Thanksgiving and used a combo of my china and the everyday white I was using at the time. (Not the Mikasa, some heavy stoneware which I gave away because I kept dropping it)

wnylib

(24,803 posts)
184. My mother also had a set of fine china from my brother
Mon Dec 23, 2024, 02:58 AM
Monday

who sent it to her from Japan when he was in the Navy.

I never did have a set of fine china. Stoneware is ok with me.

10 Turtle Day

(513 posts)
22. Momisms from my mom:
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 07:22 AM
Saturday

It’s your nickel - after calling her, which means talk as long as you want because I’m the one feeding the pay phone or paying the phone bill.

He pulled a shrewdie on me - when someone pulls a fast one on her

Damed if you do, damed if you don’t - no good choices

Tan your hide - get a spanking

Month of Sundays - a very long time

Skedaddle - leave in a hurry

Long tall drink of water - a handsome man

I just realized that the explanation to my first two, pay phone and pulled a fast one, are also no longer in use. I guess I’m officially old.

Edited to fix typo

LeftInTX

(30,636 posts)
186. my mom had some weird sayings. Can't remember all them, but pants were britches.
Mon Dec 23, 2024, 03:18 AM
Monday

She was from Florida.

Phentex

(16,561 posts)
24. Monkey Business
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 09:08 AM
Saturday

got some strange looks and a few chuckles after I said this to the Google Fiber installers

They never heard of it

soldierant

(8,013 posts)
150. Now that reminds me of a science fiction story
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 09:33 PM
Sunday

in which a man decides to obliterate himself by time traveling to before he was born and killing his father. But when he does that, nothing happens. He is still alive and well. He says, "Well, I'll be a son of a b***h," and the author's last word is "And, in a manner of speaking, he was."

Emile

(30,825 posts)
25. Colder than a well diggers ass.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 09:15 AM
Saturday

My mother-in-law said that all the time. How did she know the temperature of a well diggers ass? I never asked.

jmowreader

(51,611 posts)
145. That was one of my dad's favorites too
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 11:57 AM
Sunday

He also liked "shit in one hand and wish in the other, and see which one fills up first."

Also "I'm so hungry I'd eat a skunk's ass."

lark

(24,344 posts)
29. Back 40
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 09:21 AM
Saturday

Mom was from rural TX and she and her family used phrase a lot but no one else does anymore.

cksmithy

(255 posts)
73. We still call the back corner of our yard
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 11:54 AM
Saturday

"the back 40" because our yard is so small. Growing up in the 1950's it was a common expression on tv western shows that my parents always on. I'm from California.

soldierant

(8,013 posts)
151. I have a friend who likes it
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 09:38 PM
Sunday

and he is a retired pediatrician. Not exactly a kindergarten teacher - but not so different.

Diamond_Dog

(35,188 posts)
31. Par for the course.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 09:28 AM
Saturday

Last edited Sat Dec 21, 2024, 11:03 AM - Edit history (1)

A fine how-do-you-do.

Wake up and smell the coffee!

Dollars to donuts.

Referring to an unmarried woman as an “old maid”. (Thank God that one is not used any more).

Pluvious

(4,809 posts)
101. I remember that "wake up and smell the coffee" got new life...
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 03:10 PM
Saturday

... from a great scene in the first sequel to Alien, Aliens?

Pluvious

(4,809 posts)
142. I might be miss remembering...
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 11:20 AM
Sunday

I thought it was the line :

"Game over man, game over man, wake up and smell the coffee"

But now I'm not so sure

I think I read that the phrase originated from Ann Landers an advice columnist of all places lol

Diamond_Dog

(35,188 posts)
143. I don't know if Ann Landers originated that phrase
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 11:29 AM
Sunday

But it was one of her favorite phrases to use in her advice columns, which I read every day in the papers as a kid.

Pluvious

(4,809 posts)
144. A bit more background on the phrase
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 11:48 AM
Sunday

This is what I stumbled upon

I'm guessing she picked it up from the Nescafé ads, and helped popularize it
( or was she in the ads saying it? I guess we'll never know lol )

This one, as far as we can tell, originated in a Nescafé ad campaign and was popularized by the late advice columnist Ann Landers. Some people think it should be "wake up and smell the roses" but they're wrong. That phrase is actually a mixture of the old standard "stop and smell the roses" and "wake up and smell the coffee."


https://www.csmonitor.com/The-Culture/Food/2013/0504/15-hidden-meanings-of-popular-food-phrases/Wake-up-and-smell-the-coffee

soldierant

(8,013 posts)
154. Ann Landers and Dear Abby ("Abigail van Buren")
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 09:45 PM
Sunday

didn't just look alike - they were twin sisters. Their real first names were "Esther Pauline" and "Pauline Esther." I kid you not (now there's a phrase!) And their advice and their styles of writing were quite similar. Which makes it next to impossible to remember whether one picked up a phrase from one or the other. One is said to have originated the acronym MYOB (which desperately needs to get revived in today's America.) But don't ask me which.

doc03

(36,966 posts)
32. Some I wish I never heard again like "My Bad", calling a movie a "Flick", "Dude"
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 09:30 AM
Saturday

I ain't no fucking dude, "Woke"

Diamond_Dog

(35,188 posts)
44. A big YES to all of those, doc03!
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 09:57 AM
Saturday

Mr. Diamond still says “flick”. It drives me up the wall.

JohnnyRingo

(19,428 posts)
34. Can we add "it is what it is"?
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 09:47 AM
Saturday

I don't even know what that means or when everyone started saying it. It sounds like a capitulatory phrase when you're at a loss for more eloquent words.
Everybody says it though, and I can't change it. I guess it is what it is.

Zambero

(9,782 posts)
42. It depends on what the meaning of the word is is!
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 09:55 AM
Saturday

Oops, scratch that one. It just might get you impeached!

underpants

(187,391 posts)
79. Very 90's & 00's to me
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 12:24 PM
Saturday

I used to here it a lot at work mostly from people who feel like they HAVE to say something.

nocoincidences

(2,345 posts)
35. I hear this from one of my housemates and no one else.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 09:49 AM
Saturday

That's my story and I'm sticking to it.

hunter

(39,062 posts)
48. "Out in the tules."
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 10:18 AM
Saturday

That was a California phrase my grandma and her sister used. If you lived far from the city you lived out in the tules, which were California's Central Valley marshlands before they were all drained and converted to farmland.

There were some derogatory connotations to it, not quite so harsh as "rube" or "bumpkin."

icnorth

(1,032 posts)
49. Perhaps not politically correct and...
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 10:32 AM
Saturday

I may get smoked for saying it but, a looong time ago I heard this phrase expressing anatomical appreciation, "she has a nice hitch in her get along." Okay, I will leave quietly.

ShepKat

(432 posts)
51. I use so many of these !
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 10:38 AM
Saturday

and not too many I don't. I swear i've said 75% of these in the last month.
Golly ! (I hear that in Clara's voice in back to the future 3)

Wicked Blue

(6,791 posts)
59. Faaaaar freaking out
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 10:48 AM
Saturday

also Faaaar f*cking out.

Too cool. Too cool for school.

Total bummer.

He's such a winner (meaning loser)





EarnestPutz

(2,684 posts)
122. In college in the late sixties we actually made fun of ourselves by saying "farm out" and "out of state".....
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 07:40 PM
Saturday

instead of "far out" and "out of sight".

MaryMagdaline

(7,919 posts)
60. Malarkey and shenanigans have come back
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 10:49 AM
Saturday

Malarkey - thanks to Joe Biden
Shenanigans - not sure why it’s back, but I love it

yorkster

(2,523 posts)
63. There's one I wish would go away, well a few, but " threw up in my mouth a little" takes the cake, so to speak.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 11:00 AM
Saturday

I get the idea, but there are so many other ways to convey this reaction that aren’t quite so repulsive, nauseating, sickening, disgusting….





patphil

(7,125 posts)
64. Sealed with a Kiss.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 11:06 AM
Saturday

That's like the Pot calling the Kettle black.
Make like a tree and leaf.
See you later alligator, after while crocodile.

Marthe48

(19,350 posts)
76. Takes two to tango
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 12:08 PM
Saturday

Made their bed, now they have to lay in it

Lay down with dogs, get up with fleas

Their chicken has come home to roost

A bun in the oven

Play fast and loose

Handsome is as handsome does

My Mom and Dad both liked 'Wish in one hand, sh*t in the other and see what you have more of'

I like the old phrases and I'm always on the lookout for ones I haven't heard.





soldierant

(8,013 posts)
159. "Play fast and loose" goes back to medieval times
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 09:57 PM
Sunday

and the "fast" in it has nothing to do with speed. Grifters at fairs (which were not celebratory events primarily, but opportunities for merchants to sell to larger crowds) , then as now, had grifters. "Fast and Loose" was a game some of them used, similar in the sense of "the quickness of the hand" aspect to the "which cup is the ball under." The grifter would take a belt, often one belonging to the mark, an twist and tie it up quickly and confusingly, and challenge the mark to take a knife and drive it into a spot such that it would stay "fast" on the table when one tried to pick it up. But it would always turn out to be "loose."

Response to Buttoneer (Original post)

erronis

(17,181 posts)
86. Jimminy Cricket, golly jeezers. bless your little heart.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 01:38 PM
Saturday

Hope you do a re-post with a collection of these. (There is probably already a book/web page out there.)

yellowdogintexas

(22,819 posts)
182. "Bless Your Heart will never go away as long as there are still Southern grand mothers. !!! nt
Mon Dec 23, 2024, 01:59 AM
Monday

OldBaldy1701E

(6,630 posts)
87. Let's see...
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 01:43 PM
Saturday

"May I help you?"

"I see your side of the argument and we should discuss it further."

"I have enough." (A particularly obsolete phrase that seem to have zero meaning for anyone in this country.)

"We need to look at the big picture." (If we did that, we'd see just how insidious those rethugs have been, so they got rid of that concept.)

And one of my all time favorites... an Irish prayer that means as much today as it did back when it was created.

"From ghoulies, ghosties, long-leggedy beasties, and things that go bump in the night, Great Lord protect us!"

I used to hear the older people say this all the time way back when. We surely need it now.

Response to Buttoneer (Original post)

malthaussen

(17,789 posts)
92. "Built like a brick outhouse"
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 02:11 PM
Saturday

(That's the bowdlerdized version). It refers to a female of aesthetically pleasing figure.

-- Mal

soldierant

(8,013 posts)
168. In certain circumstances,
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 11:11 PM
Sunday

it could also refer to a well-built man. In Terence Blanchard's opera "Champion, " based on the real life of Emil Griffith (who never intended to do anything else but make hats), the librettist has the fight manager he meets tell him that's how he is built, in just those words (uncensored). (He does become a boxer, a champion - I forget what weight - but is not at peace with himself after one of his blows in the ring kills another boxer.)

crud

(844 posts)
93. Heavens to murgatroid (OMG)
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 02:14 PM
Saturday

Red up the house (when straightening up the house for unexpected company)

If anyone calls, tell them Barnaby said hello (if you're from Cleveland you may have heard this)

The Stoop, when referring to the door step (might be a pennsylvania thing)

50 cents to see the elephant jump the fence. (when asking for ice cream man money)

These were some of my mom's sayings.

Iggo

(48,540 posts)
167. Might've been Snagglepuss.
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 11:09 PM
Sunday

Last edited Mon Dec 23, 2024, 03:16 AM - Edit history (1)

Whoever it was has a lisp.

Response to Buttoneer (Original post)

Pluvious

(4,809 posts)
97. No one today would say...
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 02:51 PM
Saturday

Help me buckle up my shoes

"Three four open the door, five six pick up sticks..."

Pluvious

(4,809 posts)
115. That could explain why...
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 04:25 PM
Saturday

It's almost got 2000 views right now, and 115 replies, but only 14 recs

soldierant

(8,013 posts)
171. I would certainly recommend it
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 11:25 PM
Sunday

if I could find the rec button. I have not been able to recommend an OP since the latedt changed in recommending comments.

soldierant

(8,013 posts)
169. Not really -
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 11:17 PM
Sunday

even though I have not yet come across one I haven't heard somewhere before. Sur, it means I'm old, but what a rich life I must have lived to have heard all those generations of catch phrases.

Niagara

(9,915 posts)
117. The Life of Riley
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 04:57 PM
Saturday

The cat's meow

See a man about a dog/horse

Not on your Nelly

Hold your horses

Up your nose with a rubber hose

Up to snuff

What's your poison?

Jeebo

(2,317 posts)
136. "The Life of Riley" was a 1950s TV show.
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 02:02 AM
Sunday

And a 1940s radio show. I used to watch it on TV in the late 1950s when I was a kid. I never knew it was a radio show in the 1940s, before I was born, until I got a Sirius satellite radio in my car a few years ago and discovered that they play episodes from that 1940s radio show often on their old-time radio classics station.

About 15 years ago I had a cat who came from one of my neighbors' houses and took up with me. I walked by him snoozing on a corner of a bookcase in my living room one day and suddenly had the thought, This cat has people feeding him, opening doors for him, giving him affection, he's living the life of Riley, so he must be ... Riley! And that was the perfect name for that cat. Somehow it just fit him to a T.

-- Ron

&t=36s

Niagara

(9,915 posts)
146. I have a neighbor that had a previous dog before it succumbed to an age related illness
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 12:03 PM
Sunday

Last edited Sun Dec 22, 2024, 01:05 PM - Edit history (1)

The neighbor was outside snow blowing and shoveling and the dog stayed close to him.


I commented on how well behaved his dog was and asked about the dog's name.


He replied. "Riley. The Life of Riley."


I don't hear that too much anymore so I though that I would throw that phrase in.

mercuryblues

(15,266 posts)
119. If any of us were holding my Mom up
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 05:05 PM
Saturday

she would tell us to Put some hustle in that bustle. IOW Stop dragging your ass hand hurry up.

WmChris

(232 posts)
128. Cold weather
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 10:03 PM
Saturday

Cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey. From an old electric lineman.

happybird

(5,192 posts)
130. Cutting the cheese
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 10:18 PM
Saturday

Came across that one at work again today.

"What are you doing next?"
"Cuttin' da cheese."

Literally, since it's a deli. We old people giggle, but we had to explain it to the younger ones because they just looked confused.

131. Swell!
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 10:58 PM
Saturday

My mother used to deny she ever said it, but all 5 kids agree she did

"I'm going to snatch you bald-headed"

3catwoman3

(25,691 posts)
133. "That really burns my cork."
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 12:31 AM
Sunday

Something my dad, born in 1921, would say if really annoyed about something. I’ve never heard anyone else say it.

Jeebo

(2,317 posts)
135. Everything's hunky-dory.
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 01:44 AM
Sunday

It means everything's good. It means everybody's happy about the state of affairs. Which none of us here at DU are since November 5. I used to hear "hunky-dory" every once in a while but rarely hear it any more, so for the past few years I've been using it in an attempt to bring it back.

— Ron

soldierant

(8,013 posts)
183. Bill "Bojangles" Robinson loved the word and used it frequently.
Mon Dec 23, 2024, 02:08 AM
Monday

But he doesn't appear to have originated it. At least one white person picked it up from him and popularized it among white people. Of the many, the story I tend to believe is that is came from creole French and usage in the black communities of New Orleans.

marigold20

(922 posts)
138. "It's all the go"
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 06:53 AM
Sunday

referring to something stylish. Something my mom (born in 1920) used to say.

madamesilverspurs

(16,082 posts)
163. "Would you like me to check under the hood?"
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 10:41 PM
Sunday

My body is getting cranky enough that I'm really missing full-service gas stations.


.

moniss

(6,155 posts)
172. I have several such as
Sun Dec 22, 2024, 11:26 PM
Sunday

"standards of journalism", "service with a smile", "rule of law", "nobody is above the law", "work hard and you'll get ahead", "new, exciting automotive style", "clean water", "low, low prices", "affordable rent", "she wouldn't do that to me", "he wouldn't do that to me", "I don't know", "nobody is that crazy", "bring a bottle of milk from the store", "your condition is covered", "somebody will stop it", "new and improved", "this won't hurt a bit", "leave our kids a better life than we had", "peace and harmony", "the public good", "he's not like Hitler", "I'll paint any car $29.95", "it'll only be for awhile", "our company was not aware of the harmful effects".

C0RI0LANUS

(1,886 posts)
175. Here's one we don't hear any more.
Mon Dec 23, 2024, 01:28 AM
Monday

"PDQ"

As in telling someone on 13 April: "Better get your taxes done, PDQ!"

(Pretty Darn Quick)

I used it at work; others went with ASAP.

LeftInTX

(30,636 posts)
185. Gay and carefree meaning the same thing. As in the "The Gay Divorcee"
Mon Dec 23, 2024, 03:09 AM
Monday

There were lots of phrases with gay in them when I was growing up.
We learned them in school.
They eventually went bye-bye.

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