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Silly Sayings

(30 Posts)
Joelsnan Thu 20-Feb-14 08:17:58

Last night I said something which I thought afterwards, how stupid it was. I have been saying it for years. I don't know if I invented it myself or heard it somewhere else. The saying is:
'I was sweating tin hats and dog biscuits'.
Does anyone else say this, or do you have your own 'silly sayings'?

Anne58 Thu 20-Feb-14 08:19:03

Never heard that one!

henetha Thu 20-Feb-14 10:13:01

I say "Pigs in fields" when I'm angry. No idea where this comes from.

MarionHalcombe Thu 20-Feb-14 12:26:16

A family saying is 'Miss Nicholson's dead'.

One of my dd's teachers died about 8 years ago after she had left senior school, so I told her that it had happened

The day after I told her again, and then later that same day I said "i've got some sad news..."

About a week later I said "oh, I've not told you..."

So now whenever anyone repeats themselves we say "Miss Nicholson's dead"

It gets said to me an awful lot sad

rosesarered Thu 20-Feb-14 14:17:17

Joelsnan why don't you google it?it's new to me anyway.

Joelsnan Thu 20-Feb-14 21:26:11

Nothing on Google. Maybe I did invent the silly saying, trouble is it has become part of me.

absent Fri 21-Feb-14 00:28:22

Sounds immeasurably painful. grin

liminetta Fri 21-Feb-14 08:47:29

Whenever Ime tempted (or provoked) into saying an expletive, I come out with "Shine a light!" I learned that years ago from an old lady who would come out with funny sayings as well (cant remember them now); Shine a light!" grin

MamaCaz Fri 21-Feb-14 10:31:40

Go home, your rabbit's dead!

Usually, but not always, said to a child. Originally I guess it meant something like "stop pestering me", but when our children were growing up it would get used in all sorts of situations grin

Joan Fri 21-Feb-14 12:04:45

There are sayings here in Australia that make little sense to me. One is "carrying on like a pork chop". I mean, how DOES a pork chop carry on? I suspect the saying means 'making a fuss', but still....

Ana Fri 21-Feb-14 12:28:26

I've heard 'shine a light!' and I think I've used it myself. I wonder where it came from?

Ana Fri 21-Feb-14 12:34:21

Just googled it - apparently it's a Northern English expression which is indeed used instead of an expletive!

rosesarered Fri 21-Feb-14 19:16:15

Yes, I am from Yorkshire and I have definitely heard people say this in the past [shine a light!] I took it to mean seeing something[or hearing something] so amazing that you need to see it properly;shine a light on it.

rosesarered Fri 21-Feb-14 19:19:40

Do you remember that if your slip was showing, somebody always said that somebody or other is dead?Can't remember the name though was it Charley?As in 'Charley's dead!' That sounds about right.

Joan Fri 21-Feb-14 22:28:12

And 'it's snowing down south' for the same thing.

Cornflake1623 Sat 22-Feb-14 00:56:49

When excusing yourself from a gathering for a trip to the loo. My sister always says "I've just got to go and turn the Vicars bike around", and no I have absolutely no idea where she got it from - and she's not saying.

seaspirit Sat 22-Feb-14 16:12:22

we used say charlies dead for petticoat showing at school, when the eldest kids were small we had a puppy I was training and for 'come' I used cushti, it became a code word for the girls, something I could yell in a crowded place and the kids knew it was me, and was meant for them.( the kids started it by heading my way with the dog)

rosequartz Sat 22-Feb-14 16:23:34

I'm ashamed to admit it but I found myself saying what Miranda's Mum says when I was in Tesco the other day with DH

"Well it's what I call a ....... " - then correcting myself and saying "it's what everyone calls it!"
Only to find DH had disappeared and I was talking to a stranger. It was what I call a faux pas

Oh! Sugarlumps!
I have heard DH say "carrying on like a pork chop"

ninathenana Sat 22-Feb-14 17:04:11

My mum used to talk about people having hair 'like a yard of pump water'
i.e. very straight.

roseq I used to work with a lovely lady who used 'sugarlumps' rather than an expletive. Later when I worked in a school it became very useful grin

Elegran Sat 22-Feb-14 17:07:34

We would say "strike a light" not shine it.

"Must go and point Percy at the porcelain."

rockgran Sat 22-Feb-14 17:17:15

Hell's Bells and buckets of trout - is one of my favourites.

"Ee, tha's a closet!" Meaning "You are a water closet" as in "You are daft."

"What a cough drop!" similar to above but usually said to a child.

"I'll hang you up by your stocking tops!" - a mild threat.

"As true as I'm smoking this ferret." I think I made that one up but use it all the time.

Lona Sat 22-Feb-14 17:19:08

When I was a teenager out with a mixed crowd of young people, one of the lads said he was going "where all the the big nobs hang out", and I still laugh about it now.

Pittcity Sat 22-Feb-14 17:26:52

My Grandad always used to say we were "as black at Newgate's (it was pronounced newgits) Knocker" when we came in dirty.

rosequartz Sat 22-Feb-14 17:33:05

"You're as black as the Ace of spades" when I came in from playing.

Pointing Percy etc is a saying DHA uses, elegran, I thought it could be a R. Naval expression.

rosequartz Sat 22-Feb-14 17:33:24

DH sorry!