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Old sayings, which make no sense?

Messages
12,983
Location
Germany
One of the best examples:
"Bone-dry", german "fart-dry".

I never comprehended, what a fart has to do with "dry".

Or:
"Feel as fit as a fiddle", german "feel poodle-well!"

What is the point with the poodle??
 
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robrinay

One Too Many
Messages
1,490
Location
Sheffield UK
Not really nonsense more like money sense,
‘Many a mickle makes a muckle’ is Scots for, ‘Look after the pennies and the pounds will look after themselves’.
However if you search for mickle and muckle they are apparently from the same root meaning large amount?
 
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Tiki Tom

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,399
Location
Oahu, North Polynesia
It's raining cats & dogs.

My mother used to say “it’s raining children’s shoes” (Es regnet Kinderschuhe), which I thought was charming. Growing up in California, I never heard that phrase from anyone but her.

And also ‘not enough room to swing a cat’ (o’ nine tails)

The version I heard was “not enough room to swing a dead cat.” (Your version makes more sense.)
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,771
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
When somone struts around with an air of conceit, my mother's response is "don't she think she's the cat's ass." Which, I guess, if you spend a lot of time around cats, does make at least a little sense.

In Maine dialect "muckle" means to latch onto something, to grab onto it tightly -- "Muckle ont' that table an' help me lug it out to the dump."
 

MisterCairo

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,005
Location
Gads Hill, Ontario
Would you prefer a wet one? :cool:

Back in 2001 or so, my favourite alt-rock station in Toronto, CFNY 102.1 The Edge, had a great morning show, Humble and Fred. They would run bizarre competitions or do other fun things.

One event was to come up with a new noun and verb, one representing "the act of trying to pass a fart, and inadvertently passing more solid and/or liquid matter".

The word they came up with:

Flurch. As in "I did a flurch" or "I just flurched".

They would then ask call in guests if they had ever "flurched", to which they would reply "what"?. Humble and Fred would explain, and the caller would then joyfully explain those times when they did just that.

I am not aware it ever joining the urban dictionary.
 
Messages
19,434
Location
Funkytown, USA
Cat caught your tongue?
Let the cat out of the bag.
It's raining cats & dogs.
There's more than one way to skin a cat.
Curiosity killed the cat.
All those sayings have nothing to do with felines. Think cat o' nine tails.

Curiosity killed the cat is a comment on the penchant for felines to investigate things.

Good one! I never had an idea, why the cat is in the bag. :D

It's Schrodingers' cat. He later purchased a box.

My dad used to say "shake a leg" for hurry up.

When I was younger and would ask things like, "When are we gonna get there?" my mother's stock response was "Two shakes of a lamb's tail."

  • "If it’s drowning you’re after, don’t torment yourself with shallow water."

But that makes sense.
 

robrinay

One Too Many
Messages
1,490
Location
Sheffield UK
A friend one told me the origin of the saying, “It’s cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey”
referred to the brass rings on stands (called brass monkeys?) used onboard ships to store cannon balls becoming so cold they shrank reducing their diameter and the cannon balls rolled off. Another explanation is that the original phrase was to freeze the balls on a brass monkey -ie ice glued the cannonballs to the brass ring.
 

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