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Saying a saying

(66 Posts)
1987H2001M2002Inanny Mon 06-Feb-23 17:13:42

Two of my favourite ones.....women have many faults,men have only two,everything they say and everything they do,and he'll hath no fury like a woman scorned !!

sodapop Mon 06-Feb-23 17:23:48

Don't agree with the first one 1987nanny and presumably you have a typo in the second, Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned, that one I can relate to .

MerylStreep Mon 06-Feb-23 17:32:21

I will not agree with the first one, but my partner would wholeheartedly agree with the second.

Fleurpepper Mon 06-Feb-23 17:38:51

I need (Brexit ;) ) like a fish needs a bicycle.

On my fridge currently I have 'only dead fish go with the flow'.

Bridgeit Mon 06-Feb-23 18:07:40

I remember as a child, hearing the saying -
‘She is no better than she ought to be ‘
Cannot ever hearing the said of a man ! 😏😄

LRavenscroft Mon 06-Feb-23 18:14:14

"After four days fish and visitors smell. "

absent Mon 06-Feb-23 18:21:51

Hell hath no fury… is a misquotation from The Mourning Bride (William Congreve).

"Heaven has no rage like love to hatred turned, nor Hell a fury like a woman scorned."

Once a pedant, always a pedant!

Yammy Mon 06-Feb-23 18:24:12

They are fra[from] the fell backs.For someone who seems not very bright.
They didn't know if they were coming or going.confused
A fish out of water.

1987H2001M2002Inanny Wed 08-Feb-23 12:06:06

Sodapop and MerylStreep, my choices were only meant as a bit of fun,you know,it is when you laugh and smile!!and yes it should have read as Hell.Maybe that's where I will be sent for trying to be funny!!

grandMattie Wed 08-Feb-23 12:22:29

Was extremely surprised when Suzy Dent of Countdown yesterday said she had never heard “not as green as cabbage looking”! I used to say it frequently to the children I taught…

biglouis Wed 08-Feb-23 12:33:25

My grandmother used to say:

S/he has all her chairs at home (is smart)

and also

Not the sharpest tool in the box (dumb)

My mothers' most frequest sayings:-

You can't feed a family on one mans' wage

You leave things at your finger ends (dont put things away)

Dont be like that (a stock answer to anything she didnt agree with or understand)

My favorite Liverpool expression:-

God bless you and your one eyelash (to someone vain or selfish)

NotSpaghetti Wed 08-Feb-23 12:58:52

I think some sayings are on the cruel side when you look at them - I admit I do use the 'not the brightest button/sharpest tool' occasionally but I'm not necessarily meaning dumb biglouis - I suppose it's partly context.

'only dead fish go with the flow' is one I could subscribe to probably because I used to regularly find myself fighting against the stream.

I do say:
A penny for them...?
The ball's in your court
Don't count your chickens...
Speak of the devil
Hope for the best, prepare for the worst

I'm suddenly uncertain as to what sort of sayings we are looking at here!!
grin
Are we really thinking of proverbs?

sodapop Wed 08-Feb-23 16:45:06

1987H2001M2002Inanny

Sodapop and MerylStreep, my choices were only meant as a bit of fun,you know,it is when you laugh and smile!!and yes it should have read as Hell.Maybe that's where I will be sent for trying to be funny!!

Didn't quite hit the button then did it 1987nanny

lixy Wed 08-Feb-23 16:48:34

As much use as a chocolate teapot - often muttered under breath through gritted teeth!

midgey Wed 08-Feb-23 17:51:05

My dad used to say ‘I don’t cut my cabbages twice’ meaning he wouldn’t repeat things.

Yammy Wed 08-Feb-23 17:57:07

A sandwich short of a picnic
The filters not working
My mother's was Don't leave for tomorrow what you can do today.

dragonfly46 Wed 08-Feb-23 17:58:36

I was constantly told I looked with my mouth; nobody would get off a galloping horse to look at me; more money than sense; keep your finger on your ha’penny!

Witzend Wed 08-Feb-23 18:13:45

dragonfly46

I was constantly told I looked with my mouth; nobody would get off a galloping horse to look at me; more money than sense; keep your finger on your ha’penny!

A granny of mine used to say, ‘Keep your hand on your ha’penny!’ (She would also say, ‘It only takes a minute!’ - I’m sure you can guess what she was referring to!).
Wasn’t it an old music hall song? She would have been young during the music hall era.

Oh, and she once told me that she’d ditched a young man she was walking out with, because, ‘He tried to get his hand down my placket fastener!’ 😂

V3ra Wed 08-Feb-23 20:07:51

The saying (or advice?) I most remember from my Mum is,
"If a thing's worth doing, it's worth doing well,"
however mundane it might be 😇

AussieGran59 Wed 08-Feb-23 21:30:57

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

pandapatch Wed 08-Feb-23 21:39:23

If you asked my nan what's for dinner? she would always reply, "3 jumps up cupboard door and a bite off the knob" never jeard it before or since!

BigBertha1 Wed 08-Feb-23 22:09:47

My mother would say 'air pie and a walk round the table'.

Grannmarie Wed 08-Feb-23 22:27:39

My Dad used to say,
'There's nae pockets in a shroud.'
Meaning, enjoy your money, you can't take it with you.

Wyllow3 Wed 08-Feb-23 22:42:28

I'm sure we all had as children

"dont put it down, put it AWAY!

I still have to try hard!

welbeck Thu 09-Feb-23 01:21:42

one which i rather like, never heard when young:
<well i'll go to the foot of my stairs.>
i think it's a northern saying ?
i find it quite charming. must try to use it.