2jakes
I'll Lock Up
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- Location
- Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
My seventh grade English teacher called such phrases "word whiskers," linguistic excrescences that grew on perfectly legitimate sentences while serving no useful function in communicating the subject under discussion. Know what I mean?
Meanwhile, a phrase I've not heard in a long time is "ain't you a stitch!" A "stitch" was a person given to broad, loud humor -- and the phrase was usually not intended to be complimentary. When my uncle would fart to the tune of "Yankee Doodle" at the Thanksgiving table, my grandmother would glare balefully in his direction and say "Ain't you a stitch."
There's always a bit of envy growing with a large family.
Especially when one has a musical talent while the others
consider him a "pain in the a_ _ !"
A term that has not quite disappeared.
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