GHT
I'll Lock Up
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So is "dial."And hang up is still in common parlance.
So is "dial."And hang up is still in common parlance.
Id go with "lower the window" and "raise the window" That way i am covered until we have forcefields
And hang up is still in common parlance. With cellular phones it is tougher to understand but we still put landlines down even the wireless ones
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So is "dial."
"Hang up"? How about "Ring off!"
"Roll Down the window"? How about "Put up the side curtains"?
Exactly. Not all unmarried men and women are closet homosexuals. Some just aren't the marrying kind, some, like your algebra teacher, perhaps just have trouble attracting the opposite sex.
That's an assumption that really needs to be put to rest. It's still the train of thought around here, especially if you dress well. A well dressed guy with no wife just has to be gay, you know. Give me a break.
I think I'm a little from column A and a little from column B lol lol lol
I also remember "light in the loafers" as being a crypto phrase for gay, but to LizzieMaine's point, while it sounds horrible today, it wasn't (always or, in my experience, mainly) delivered with rancor and anger, just a way of quietly acknowledging it.
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Now there was the "Boston Marriage", but I do not believe that there was any similarly recognized term for the male variant therof.
I also remember "light in the loafers" as being a crypto phrase for gay, but to LizzieMaine's point, while it sounds horrible today, it wasn't (always or, in my experience, mainly) delivered with rancor and anger, just a way of quietly acknowledging it. To be sure, there was much rancor and prejudice, but I also remember many, many people being quietly accepting and polite too.
In our neighborhood, it was just a matter of not having the slightest bit of interest in other people's sex lives. We didn't talk about such things in public, ever, with anyone. It just wasn't done.
In our neighborhood, it was just a matter of not having the slightest bit of interest in other people's sex lives. We didn't talk about such things in public, ever, with anyone. It just wasn't done.
And as to the topic of homosexuals, I'll agree with Mr.Hawk. Growing up in the deep south, gay people had to get in line for a hard time. I can remember all sorts of colorful terms for all sorts of non-white, hetero, protestant that thankfully are no longer widely in use
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Interesting. I've heard the term "confirmed bachelor" in movies but, until I read this thread today, had never considered it to be a possible reference to sexual orientation. I had always assumed it simply referred to someone who, for whatever reason, was disinterested in or against the idea of marriage. I've known men like that (who, as far as I know, are heterosexual as evidenced by their "string" of relationships with women), so it never occurred to me to think otherwise.