flappergirl
lixy
flappergirl
An update to my post, if anyone is still reading! I've just nosed around online and it seems that "spitting feathers" is used to mean thirsty in the North of England and also the Southern States of the USA, where "spitting cotton" is also used.
I'm in my late sixties and all my life the expression has only ever indicated anger. It was quite a common saying when I was a child. I don't suppose I've ever used it outside of the West Country so I've never received any puzzled looks.
'Spitting feathers' indicates crossness in Sussex too, as does 'spitting tacks''.
Thanks lixy. Yes, we also say spitting tacks in the West Country. They both mean angry. If we ever say it in the North it seems we may be offered a cup of tea!
Not on my part of Yorkshire, you wouldn't- growing up there, I never came across spitting feathers used to mean 'thirsty'. In fact, I've yet to hear anyone in 'real life' use it with that meaning.
And I think most people around me as a child said 'Cwop' for the Co-op - that's how I heard it, anyway¡