Author Topic: old sayings  (Read 112932 times)

Offline joboy

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #63 on: Wednesday 04 September 13 22:49 BST (UK) »
Alien Lady - if someone was scratching their bottom, Dad would say "he's got dirt in his eye".
Similar to this my dad whilst scratching used to say 'I've got an new tooth coming through'
Gill UK and Australia
Bell UK and Australia
Harding(e) Australia
Finch UK and Australia

My memory's not as sharp as it used to be.
Also, my memory's not as sharp as it used to be.

Offline loobylooayr

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #64 on: Wednesday 04 September 13 22:52 BST (UK) »
My Ayrshire granny used to say if something was quite right- like a picture hanging crooked on the wall  or curtains not hung right - " It's all aff tae one side like Gourock".
Don't know if Gourock does sit off to the side ???.

And as for the underskirt showing below the hem of your skirt we used to say "It's raining in Paris" - How quaint :-[


Offline Lisajj

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #65 on: Wednesday 04 September 13 22:56 BST (UK) »
"More tea vicar?" Or "someone just stepped on the carpet frog" if someone let wind
If you were sulking, it was referred to as "mardy"
"As mad as a box of frogs"
"We've arrived and to prove it we're here"
"That's my four pen'uth" - said my piece
"Ya daft 'ayputh" - if someone was silly
"Wouldn't touch him with a barge pole"
Johnson, Crankshaw, Burdett, Shaw, Dawson/Dulson, Whitebread/Whitbread, Drane, Hyett, Holtaway, Thompson, Bodell, Livermore, Gee, Vernon, Smith......the list goes on....and on...and on....

Offline joboy

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #66 on: Wednesday 04 September 13 22:59 BST (UK) »
and keep your hand on your ha'penny! lol                                                 
My God  :o :o how I remember that saying ;D ;D
Gill UK and Australia
Bell UK and Australia
Harding(e) Australia
Finch UK and Australia

My memory's not as sharp as it used to be.
Also, my memory's not as sharp as it used to be.


Offline jess5athome

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #67 on: Wednesday 04 September 13 23:01 BST (UK) »
Hi, I don't know if it's been said yet,
"Don't cast a clout till may is out"....... as in don't put your summer clothes on till June.
Frank.
Ramsey Ridsdale Ridgway Kempen Knight Harrison Denby Sisson Graney Spilsbury Wain Hebden Abbott Skinn ........ Yorkshire (Doncaster Goole Snaith Thorne area)Lincolnshire Nottinghamshire The Netherlands

Offline Greensleeves

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #68 on: Wednesday 04 September 13 23:12 BST (UK) »
From my Suffolk grandmother if I was wishing for something when I was a child:  "If wishes were horses, beggars would ride!".  How very true...
Suffolk: Pearl(e),  Garnham, Southgate, Blo(o)mfield,Grimwood/Grimwade,Josselyn/Gosling
Durham/Yorkshire: Sedgwick/Sidgwick, Shadforth
Ireland: Davis
Norway: Torreson/Torsen/Torrison
Census information Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Offline SwissGill

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #69 on: Thursday 05 September 13 05:06 BST (UK) »
where'er you be,let your wind go free. In church or chapel let it rattle!

I nearly spluttered tea on to my keyboard

He's in the army now
He went to milk a cow
The cow let off and he flew off
He's in the air force now
Whitlow: Witton-cum-Twambrooks/Northwich
Bowers: Marthall, Siddington, Cheshire
Owen: Cheshire
Pfisterer (Fisher): West Riding Yks 1850-1875
Fisher (Pfisterer): Des Moines, Iowa 1886-
Wallis: West Riding Yks/Des Moines, Iowa, 1892-
Heinzmann: Hull/Northwich
Pfisterer, Heinzmann, Künzelsau, Baden-Württemberg
Brueck: Kocherstetten B-W
Volpp: Morsbach B-W
Schluchterer: Künzelsau, B-W

Offline joboy

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #70 on: Thursday 05 September 13 05:51 BST (UK) »
Australians will remember 'Better than a poke in the eye with a blunt stick'
Gill UK and Australia
Bell UK and Australia
Harding(e) Australia
Finch UK and Australia

My memory's not as sharp as it used to be.
Also, my memory's not as sharp as it used to be.

Offline BevL

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #71 on: Thursday 05 September 13 05:57 BST (UK) »
One set of grandparents were from Lancashire and London and the other side was from Ireland and Scotland, so my mother and her sisters came out with a lot of these sayings which are still used in the family today; I remember particularly the 'let wind go free' one which was used frequently when my mother was older and was  walking  along 'letting wind go free'.  My husband says that I am getting like that now!
Keep putting them up on the board!
Bev
MOORE (Kent) & FRENCH (Sussex) & Western Australia, LOVE (Kent), ROPER 1810 (N Ireland). ADAM 1808 (Paisley), Scotland, Victoria & West Aust, TROTTER 1700's onwards  Northern Ireland, Scotland & Aust, FLAHERTY 1791/2 (Ireland) CHAPMAN (Kent) &  Western Australia, CARROLL & POWER. Ireland & Western  Australia, FISHER  Lancashire & Western Australia, FIDLER Denton, Lancashire, Victoria, MARSH Essex & Western Australia, COOPER - Southwark, London, Victoria
All to the lucky country.