Author Topic: old sayings  (Read 113256 times)

Offline jess5athome

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #108 on: Friday 06 September 13 12:50 BST (UK) »
What about "Stop crying before I give you something to cry about"  :o
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 jess5athome

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #109 on: Friday 06 September 13 12:54 BST (UK) »
Just thought of another one for someone with "Bow legs",
"He couldn't stop a pig in a gennel"  ;D ( or ginnel depending on how far up north you come from)
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 everlea

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #110 on: Friday 06 September 13 12:58 BST (UK) »
Forgot to add that as a child I overheard two family members discussing an aunt & uncle who had

13 children, saying "He only has to take his trousers off & she has a baby," and for quite a long time

I believed that to be a fact of life.

(Well, we were more sheltered Back in the Day, weren't we?)

                                                                                                      Everlea.

Offline Kleftiwallah

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #111 on: Friday 06 September 13 13:21 BST (UK) »
My old engineering instructor used to say, when asked how tight to tighten a bolt  -

 "Tighten it until it sheares then back off one flat" !

Cheers,   Tony. ;D

Oakes - of Camberwell/Lambeth area of London.   Dixon - of Cumbria (then Cumberland) North Western England)


Offline groom

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #112 on: Friday 06 September 13 13:21 BST (UK) »
I can remember my grandmother telling my brother that he needed to pull his socks up and start doing something, and then giving him a clout for being cheeky when he bent down to do so.  ;D ;D

The bread and pullit for tea was always a disappointment, as I thought pullit was pullet and expected chicken sandwiches.
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Offline SwissGill

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #113 on: Friday 06 September 13 13:38 BST (UK) »
What was it then?
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 jess5athome

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #114 on: Friday 06 September 13 13:40 BST (UK) »

The bread and pullit for tea was always a disappointment, as I thought pullit was pullet and expected chicken sandwiches.

Just had to look that one up....... apparently it's supposed to mean Greased bread on a length of string, .......... swallow the bread and then "Pullit" for the next meal  ;D ;D ;D

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 groom

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #115 on: Friday 06 September 13 13:41 BST (UK) »
Pull it I presume, as it having a slice of bread and pulling it apart.  ;D ;D It usually ended up as bread and jam as far as I can remember.
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Offline ann255

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Re: old sayings
« Reply #116 on: Friday 06 September 13 13:49 BST (UK) »
Forgot to add that as a child I overheard two family members discussing an aunt & uncle who had
13 children, saying "He only has to take his trousers off & she has a baby," and for quite a long time
I believed that to be a fact of life.
(Well, we were more sheltered Back in the Day, weren't we?)       Everlea.

Priceless!! You should start a new thread Everlea, on misconceptions/misunderstandings from things heard as a child.

Here is another one.  Many of you will remember when people collected silver paper and milk tops for raising money to buy guide dogs.  My daughter thought that the milk bottle tops were used for the poor 'blind dogs so they could see'.  Still cringes now about it.
BROWNING - Kent
DEARING - Kent
FOORD - Kent and Essex
GARRITY - Kent and Essex
GIBBS - Kent
HARE - Essex
JENNINGS - Essex
KEMPTON - Kent
PERKINS - Kent
PETTIT - Suffolk and Essex
RICHARDS - Kent
SIMMONS - Kent
THOMPSON - Suffolk

CLAYDON - NSW,AUSTRALIA