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Idioms and sayings

(160 Posts)
yogagran Wed 21-Nov-12 20:40:17

Talking to my DGD this afternoon I mentioned that "there was just enough blue in the sky to patch a sailors trousers". She looked at me as though I was completely mad and I had to explain the expression. This set me thinking that a lot of these sayings are going out of fashion and may be lost forever within our lifetime. What other sayings and phrases do you use, or remember your parents using?

Sbagran Sat 24-Nov-12 10:21:19

I often use a saying my beloved Nan used to use - 'Doing a job and making a job' - referring to someone who for example has cleared out a cupboard and left it lovely and tidy but having dumped unwanted stuff into another cupboard, thereby making the clearing out of the second cupboard necessary! It is so appropriate in many situations these days.
Sadly we lost my dear Mum three years ago but I have been writing down her sayings to keep in our family history archives!
Classic ones from dear Mum were things like
"I turned around and said..."
"I poked my nose out to see if it was raining..."
and a real classic was when she was in hospital - she was checking with us that we were keeping her bird-feeders topped up and announced to all around that she "had her tits out in the back garden last week" grin
God bless her she left us so many memories to make us smile!

Deedaa Fri 23-Nov-12 21:27:51

I remember copletely confusing my son a few years ago by telling him I was down to the last knockings. Having been born in Cornwall it took him years to believe than rhyming slang existed - he thought it was something we made up. I don't think he knows about backslang at all. My mother's favourite expression was In and Out Like A Dog in A Fair, and she frequently had bones in her legs - though not as often as her mother did!

annodomini Fri 23-Nov-12 20:25:18

When my mother had some kind of pain or cramp in her leg, she would say, 'I've got a bone in my leg'. I was puzzled about how she would get about without one.

bluebell Fri 23-Nov-12 20:20:19

Howden Fair I meant

bluebell Fri 23-Nov-12 20:19:29

My grandmother would say when flustered 'I don't know if I'm on this earth or Fuller's' and when the house was a mess 'This place looks like Howder Fair'

numberplease Fri 23-Nov-12 15:58:17

My auntie used to refer to applying make-up as "putting a bit of tutty on".

matson Fri 23-Nov-12 15:21:09

without turning round , mam would say ." i know what you are doing, i,ve got eyes in the back of my head" !

Greatnan Fri 23-Nov-12 15:13:20

As black as the hobs of hell!
Side the table. (Clear it of pots)

matson Fri 23-Nov-12 15:09:14

when pulling a face we where told " if the wind changes you,ll stay like that"

Maniac Fri 23-Nov-12 15:01:06

Ella I remember hearing that often ,sometimes just 'a man on a galloping horse'
My gran used to say 'as black as an ouzel'. Before pit-top baths were provided miners came home with coal dust still on their faces.it was much later I came across the word ouzel in a Shakespeare play -found it means 'blackbird'.

Ella46 Fri 23-Nov-12 13:43:28

If there was something slightly wrong with something, my mum would say "A blind man on a galloping horse won't notice!"

grannyactivist Fri 23-Nov-12 13:38:13

...and got a 'walloping'.

grannyactivist Fri 23-Nov-12 13:37:16

isthis - I was brought up on a large council house estate in South Manchester (Mancunians can hazard a guess at which one!) where children 'mithered' their 'mam/mum' all the time if they were 'mard', and had their 'bladder behind their eyes' if they 'skriked' all the time. If there was no food in the cupboard they had 'nowt/bugger all' in for tea and if women were 'all fur coat and no knickers' it was because they were 'no better than they should be'. We 'played out' and then crept 'round the back' through the 'ginnel' when we got back to 'our 'ouse' - and a 'walloping' if we were late. Happy times.......NOT! grin

Gmajen Fri 23-Nov-12 12:07:59

I love these too but my very ladylike MIL had the best expression of real, exasperated annoyance of any :
'Damn, damn, double damn, three hells and a bugger'

Gally Fri 23-Nov-12 11:48:07

Absent I'd forgotten that one. Dad always used to say 'it's up in Annie's room behind the clock' grin
Number grin
I wonder what sayings our children will be attributing to us in 30 years time? hmm

glitabo Fri 23-Nov-12 11:21:40

Up and down like whore's drawers.

In and out like a fiddler's elbow.

absentgrana Fri 23-Nov-12 11:07:37

I've heard of a dog with two tails. The other version seems very odd given the nature and duration of canine mating. hmm

Mishap Fri 23-Nov-12 11:02:21

"In and out like a donkey's dick" - and "like a dog with two dicks" - both phrases a friend of mine uses.

vampirequeen Fri 23-Nov-12 10:34:06

My grandma added to the 'up the wooden hill'. She said, "Up the wooden hill to Bedfordshire."

She also used to tell us that the bogey man lived in the cockloft.

Sook Fri 23-Nov-12 10:14:33

If I ever asked my Dad why he was going out he would answer "To see a man about a dog"

"Up the wooden hill" Time for bed.

On returning from a night out with my girlfriends my Nan would always ask "Did you get the glad eye then"

Smoluski Love it!

isthisallthereis Fri 23-Nov-12 09:37:26

Do you remember all the fuss and bother when Daley Thompson, after he'd won Gold in the Decathlon in 1984 in Los Angeles, a fantastic performance:

Thompson went on to explain his euphoria to US viewers, saying: I haven't been this happy since my granny caught her tit in a mangle. The Guardian

Fab!

I guess the remark was just so very unexpected especially at that most corporate and unrelaxed of Olympic Games. London 2012 had a much better atmosphere imo.

AlieOxon Fri 23-Nov-12 09:28:19

So am I !

isthisallthereis Fri 23-Nov-12 09:27:29

I'll say it again, I'm loving these! grin

absentgrana Fri 23-Nov-12 09:25:22

When someone failed to share, say, a box of chocolates. "That's all right, I've got a big box upstairs" and when something was missing, "It's up in Annie's room".

feetlebaum Fri 23-Nov-12 08:52:11

@Notsogran - My grandmother would say 'as black as Newgate's knocker' of anything really dark, not just the sky.

@Isthisallthereis My Liverpudlian father would say "Well, I'll go hopping away..." - a mental picture which baffled but delighted me.

There's an old show-business expression 'So I pissed on me props and said farewell to the profession' - the 'chips' one I only heard once - from the sweet lips of the lovely Madeline Smith, which somehow gave it extra zing!