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Tinker’s cusses

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Comments

  • shine166
    shine166 Posts: 13,920
    You can’t have your cake and eat it. Why would you want cake you can’t eat?
    If you eat it, its gone..... so you cant both have it and have eaten it.
  • blackpool72
    blackpool72 Posts: 23,679
    CatAddick said:
    Addickted said:
    "Just sell the club and fuck off" is an old Flemish saying meaning, just sell the Club and fuck off.
    I think that's another one that has been corrupted over time.  I believe the original was "Just fuck off and sell the club"
    I am mortified that someone would think that.
  • addick05
    addick05 Posts: 2,348
    Uboat said:
    addick05 said:
    You can ‘sling your hook’ is it a reference to the Captain in Peter Pan?


    No! Think it MIGHT be another old naval term, possibly to do with rigging your hammock?

    I am standing by waiting be corrected.

    So you're offering a definitive answer whilst suggesting it's probably wrong. 
    Come on mate, you can't simultaneously retain your cake whilst eating it. 


    Right, I was close. Here's the 'definitive' term. The term sling your hook is polite way of telling someone to go away. This term has a nautical origin. Hook was a name given to the ship's anchor, and the sling was the cradle that housed the anchor. Therefore, to sling your hook meant to lift anchor, stow it and sail away.

    Right, time to 'splice the main-brace' methinks.

  • EastTerrace
    EastTerrace Posts: 3,961
    Graham Norton was interviewing a writer on his radio show last week and she explained how ‘Driving me round the bend’ came from the curved driveways that used to lead up to  old large Mental Hospitals/Asylums, to make the buildings seem less imposing.
  • McBobbin
    McBobbin Posts: 12,051
    Heavens to Betsy. 

    Who what why?

    I heard it in a new Zealand accent once. Came out as hivvins to bitsy.
  • Stig
    Stig Posts: 29,026
    I thought it was heavens-a-betsy.

    It's no more clear though.
  • Stig
    Stig Posts: 29,026
    There's a good one here on Sweet Fanny Adams.

    https://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/sweet-fanny-adams.html
  • shine166
    shine166 Posts: 13,920
    Stig said:
    There's a good one here on Sweet Fanny Adams.

    https://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/sweet-fanny-adams.html
    Lucky Mr Adams
  • MrOneLung
    MrOneLung Posts: 26,857
    Stig said:
    There's an Elephant in the room.

    A jumbo problem which really should be dealt with. 

    Where did this idiom come from ?

    Don't know, but it was unheard if before QI now it's absolutely everywhere.
    what ?

    I have known this saying since i was kid in the 70's