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A lot of the English language seems to have been developed as some kind of elaborate practical joke. It's full of little sayings and idioms that on their face make no sense at all, and if traced back to their origins are downright horrifying. Right or wrong, these 10 sayings have some of the strangest (and most unsettling) histories: #10.
"Rule of Thumb"
Most say it came from ...
This is the stuff that white trash dreams are made of.
So is that true?
So why would Gillray create this poster if the ruling it referenced didn't exist? Who knows. Maybe it was already an urban legend back then. The truth of the phrase is that it likely just refers to carpenters and tailors who, without a ruler handy, would just measure things in thumb-lengths. We tried digging up evidence that they were using actual severed thumbs for the task, but even that turned out to be too awesome to be true. #9.
"Bite the Bullet"
Most say it came from ...
So, rather then stabbing a patient in the arm to distract him from the saw going through his foot, the surgeon would supposedly shove a bullet in his mouth and ask him to bite down. Of course, you could use a belt or shirt but even in the throes of death it's important for a man to look like a badass. Thus, "Bite the bullet."
So is that true?
But, notice how we said "All signs point to yes" and not a definitive "yes." Nailing down the origins of these sayings is an inexact science. The only other popular theory has to do with the preparation of bullet before firing (in old carbine rifles, you had to bite a paper cap off the cartridge so the spark could reach the gun powder). That one would of course make no damned sense, since no one would equate that task with resolutely doing something unpleasant. You might as well say it's about that dude who claimed to catch bullets out of the air in his teeth. In fact, let's just go with that one. #8.
"Basket Case"
Most say it came from ...
So is that true?
Confusingly, the earliest recorded uses of the phrase were from US military statements claiming no such limbless soldiers existed. One way or another, it doesn't seem like there were enough cases to create a whole phrase to describe them. Why have a term for something that doesn't exist? Then again we have a word for "leprechaun" so, why not. #7.
"Bust Your Chops"
Most say it came from ...
Then, these people got punched in the face--their "chops busted," if you will--and an idiom was born.
So is that true?
It's just too bad that as regal and dignifying as the chops were for our founding fathers they only made hippies in the '60s seem like unwashed piles of tie-dyed failures. To this day the only people able to successfully pull off mutton chops are old-timey gold miners. If you have the chops in question and you are not one of these three, please, shave now or prepare to have them busted. #6.
"Raining Cats and Dogs"
Most say it came from ...
When an especially rainy day did come along, the animals would either get washed off of the roof or would come leaping down looking for better cover. The story goes that the townsfolk would look out their window, see pets falling from the sky, and proclaim it to be "raining cats and dogs." Then they would probably burn a witch or something.
So is that true?
Unfortunately there are so many suggested origins of this one that it's hard to tell if any of them are more than legends mutated by time and people who like to lie. One story says 17th century sewage systems (if the town even had one) were prone to massive flooding, washing out dead dogs and cats that had fallen in. This would leave some to believe that dead animals were literally falling from the sky. Why the sight of a dead animal on the ground would cause anyone to assume it fell from the heavens, as opposed to just falling over dead the normal way, is anyone's guess. Others claim it goes all the way back to Norse mythology (the storm god Odin had two hounds). Still others say it has to do with the freak occurrence of frogs or fish falling from the sky (after being swept up by storms and flung miles away) and that the saying "it's raining cats and dogs" is just a way to say it's raining even harder than the time it rained fish. Still it seems like a catchier idiom would have been, "It's raining bears!" or "It's raining human babies! Quick, catch the babies!" followed by frenetic screaming. Anyway, there's no hard and fast proof for any of them so take your pick. |
wow turns out you really *do* only have to click the submit button once
no.6 cats i can understand but how the frick do you get dogs onto the roof? lol
no.6 cats i can understand but how the frick do you get dogs onto the roof? lol
no.6 cats i can understand but how the frick do you get dogs onto the roof? lol
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umm, if the british didn't have slave ships why is there a fucking great meassive slavery museum in Liverpool dedicated to saying "sorry we sold a shit load of slaves"..... no shit there really is!!
i always thought #6 was longer: "it's raining cats and dogs and little bitches".
Nygenxer, all you said was "also, British didn't have slaves ships." period, I don't care if you specify a book that doesn't cover that chapter of British History. You are correct on the statement that it isn't fair to only mention british ships, but the fact remains there were british ships, and yes I agree with you on the lincoln subjects, but the only reason british freed slaves from Us Ships in the War of 1812 was because it was a freakin war and they would have taken anything off of any US ship
I love articles like this, but unfortunately, I have to call BS on the nitty-gritty etymology. The phrase predates slave ships and appeared in plays about Drake and the Spanish Armada. It refers to bilge.
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Oops! I'm missing the words "after 1772." It's implied by the materials I mentioned, but I should have proofread more carefully. I just thought that it hardly seemed fair to only mention the British involvement in the slave trade since slavery was outlawed by the British almost a century before Lincoln (who would have accepted the continuation of slavery if the southern states had rescinded their secession!) and it was the British Navy that freed slaves en route from Africa during the War of 1812.
Unfortunately this wasn't the best of posts on cracked.
I can't make heads nor tails of this.
This article did not deliver.
"Basket cases" are called that, because basket weaving was a popular group activity in insane asylums at one time. Or at least, common knowledge said it was (one of those cases where what matters isn't what ACTUALLY happened, but what everyone THOUGHT happened). Just like you'd make a joke about a prisoner stamping license plates, you'd make a joke about patients in mental institutions weaving baskets. Ever heard "They're Coming to Take Me Away Haa haa?" - and the line ".. and basket weavers who sit and smile and twiddle their thumbs and toes". So somebody's a basket case if they're too dumb or crazy to be let loose in society. You know, like Cracked editors
what about, "Better a friendly dog, than a friend (who is a) dog"....www.madnessletters.com
Re "basket case," I suggest that you check out the original lyrics of the song "When Johnny Comes Marching Home." The song originated as an anti-war song in Ireland and Johnny came home, armless and legless, and was "set out in a basket to beg."
Nitty gritty had nothing to do with slavery. The word was first recorded in the 1950's. The 'nitty' is just a rhyme, like namby pamby. Oh, and scot free means uninjured, a 'scotch' being a wound.
They probably won't get a movie any time soon.
We probably would've been better off not knowing.
For those rare times when you aren't bare-chested.
Crazy, but true.
True? Of course not. But damn interesting.
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I'm pretty that 'nitty gritty' refers to when your getting your ass kicked and your face flung into dirt by Mexican gangbangers, and get sand in your mouth. You know how sand gives that gritty crunch nastiness and the nitty is the mingled taste of blood and sweat from getting beaten neearly to death. At least that's how I think of it.