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Genealogy/memories

Sayings no longer heard.

(84 Posts)
NanKate Sun 20-Apr-14 22:09:40

Well I will go to the foot of our stairs.

rosesarered Mon 21-Apr-14 20:14:19

A fine kettle of fish!

rosesarered Mon 21-Apr-14 20:15:22

as nice as ninepence

rosesarered Mon 21-Apr-14 20:15:58

as bold as brass

rosesarered Mon 21-Apr-14 20:18:14

as dead as a door nail

rosesarered Mon 21-Apr-14 20:18:43

as daft as a brush

rosesarered Mon 21-Apr-14 20:20:06

That's my quota of old sayings for tonight, my brain needs to reboot.

grannyactivist Mon 21-Apr-14 20:26:24

Adam's ale (water)
Taking Shanks' pony (to go somewhere on foot)
All fur coat and no knickers
The rag 'n' bone man's coming
Pleased as Punch

Flowerofthewest Mon 21-Apr-14 23:46:21

Once had one but the wheels fell off.
Looks like a piffy up a stick.
Black over Will's mother's
Mad as a box of frogs.
Daft as lites.
Clumsy Clot.
Thinks his body every self cos his mother's got a mangle (my late MiL's favourite saying)
Up the apples and pears to Bedfordshire

TwiceAsNice Tue 22-Apr-14 04:41:01

Let the dog see the rabbit I can still hear my grandfather saying it.

NanKate Tue 22-Apr-14 07:09:45

Love the mangle one Flower.

Do you remember in the 60s when we called friends 'Petal' ?

feetlebaum Tue 22-Apr-14 08:06:46

A nose like a blind cobbler's thumb...

Well, I'll go to sea...

Bobbing about like a fourpenny ham-bone..

grumppa Tue 22-Apr-14 08:58:34

Enough blue sky to make an old man a pair of trousers.

It would do a blind man good to see it. [On seeing a small blemish, mark or stain.]

With acknowledgements to departed MIL.

rosesarered Tue 22-Apr-14 13:56:13

queer as a nine bob note

as right as rain

your eyes are bigger than your tummy [said to me a lot when being greedy.]

going to see a man about a dog

NanKate Tue 22-Apr-14 18:46:10

You'll be right as ninepence.

Flowerofthewest Tue 22-Apr-14 19:15:42

let the dog see the rabbit.

nice little thing if it doesn't get any bigger (about any item) another of MiLs

Sunday go to meeting clothes (MiL again)

nutty as a fruit cake

Sook Tue 22-Apr-14 19:33:40

My giddy aunt.

Bobs your uncle, Fannys your aunt.

liminetta Fri 25-Apr-14 07:53:57

My Mum used to say "I,le eat hay wi a donkey (if such and such a thing happens); and; Shine a light!(this phrase was used to display her exasperation) more acceptable than swearing.

liminetta Fri 25-Apr-14 07:58:02

Come to think of it,(now that I am thinking of it);we, as the older generation, and not using very much swear words, as they seem to do , especially on telly; ought to encourage the use of all such old fashioned phrases. If the young heard them much more often, maybe the use of foul expletives would diminish,eh? smile

janthea Fri 25-Apr-14 11:30:10

A sandwich short of a picnic
Sharp enough to cut yourself.

I still use a lot of the other sayings mentioned in the thread. I don't swear but use other words instead - such as 'fudge' and 'sugar'. You can probably guess what swear words they replace grin

granjura Fri 25-Apr-14 14:02:02

of course kids have translated into the modern version '1 can short of a 6-pack' smile

rosesarered Sun 04-May-14 20:32:36

get back in the knife drawer!

rosesarered Sun 04-May-14 20:33:03

you and who's army?

rosesarered Sun 04-May-14 20:33:24

mutton dressed as lamb

rosesarered Sun 04-May-14 20:33:47

as good as gold

baubles Sun 04-May-14 21:02:50

'One volunteer is worth ten pressed men' said often by my father when there were chores to be done.

I used it at work recently to an audience rather younger than I am. I then had to explain what a 'pressed man' was....they looked at me like this hmm