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Terms Which Have Disappeared

Messages
16,897
Location
New York City
Yes.

Watching Rod Steiger as sheriff Bill Gillespie from ‘In the Heat of the Night.”

As many times as I’ve seen it....Rod Steiger "comes on like gangbusters”
when he is in the scene.

Great call - he does "come on like gangbusters" many times in that and many movies.

In one scene in "Doctor Zhivago," he is explaining to the idealistic and reluctant Zhivago and Lara why coming with him is the only safe option as the Communists will kill them - period. He doesn't use any physical force, but the power of his argument and the power of his voice and body English comes on like gangbusters. That man is an actor.

And great expression that is fading fast :).
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
Nice.png


Nice segue ! :rolleyes:
 
Messages
10,627
Location
My mother's basement
I occasionally use "came on like gangbusters" and "now you're cooking with gas." And I believe I remember (memory not always being so reliable) when and from whom I first heard both expressions. That's been a long time ago, but it doesn't predate my adolescence. My folks didn't use those phrases. Not as I recall, anyway.
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
I occasionally use "came on like gangbusters" and "now you're cooking with gas." And I believe I remember (memory not always being so reliable) when and from whom I first heard both expressions. That's been a long time ago, but it doesn't predate my adolescence. My folks didn't use those phrases. Not as I recall, anyway.

“You took the words right out of my mouth”.
I also have had similar experiences.
 
Messages
16,897
Location
New York City
My favorite race track echo of "came on like gangbusters" happened in a race the oversized Forego was running in back in the '70s. I remember watching it on TV and seeing this big, thundering horse in the stretch run starting to move past his sleeker competitors one by one and the announcer shouting "and on the outside, here comes Forego moving like a freight train."

Racing fans know how much pride the sport takes in the beauty, the elegance, the sinewy fluidity of thoroughbreds - so to hear a horse, accurately, described as a freight train in a positive way was impactful and fun. Forego was a freight train, with a high-speed-train gear.
 
Last edited:

scottyrocks

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,161
Location
Isle of Langerhan, NY
"Waste not, want not"

I just used that expression in another thread and thought - I always heard that one growing up used by the older "Depression Era" generation (my dad and grandmother, in my case), but not by the kids at school. Now I never hear it. Probably, just another one that will go away as that generation passes on.

Not likely to heard by the last few generations, where everything is disposable, often on the floor.
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
Do they even offer that option with land lines any more (I haven't had a land line in over 13 years now)?

My guess would be that this option went the way of the dodo...
similar to pay phone booths.
I can remember when phone booths were made of wood and had a small fan inside.

I wonder where “supie” changes into his super hero costume today?
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,103
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
1-800-COLLECT was a thing well into the early 2000s.

I don't have collect capability myself because my long distance service got shut off because I kept forgetting to pay the bill and I haven't bothered to get a new one, since there's nobody out of state I need to call. But I believe it is still offered by most long-distance providers.
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
I used to call "person to person” to my folks.

I would tell the operator the name of the person I was trying to contact.

The name I gave was my own.

The operator would relay the message.
Folks would tell her I wasn’t available.

Didn’t matter.
My folks knew I was coming home!:)

There was a joke about asking to talk "person to person”
to a Mr. Itsaboy.
Or something like that! :D
 
Messages
10,627
Location
My mother's basement
I used to call "person to person” to my folks.

I would tell the operator the name of the person I was trying to contact.

The name I gave was my own.

The operator would relay the message.
Folks would tell her I wasn’t available.

Didn’t matter.
My folks knew I was coming home!:)

There was a joke about asking to talk "person to person”
to a Mr. Itsaboy.
Or something like that! :D

I remember a variation on that practice. Among my scalawag relatives it was called "check calling." The caller would reach the operator via payphone and say he wished to make a collect call to wherever. The call recipient would be greeted by the operator saying something like "I have a collect call from Walter in Cedar Rapids, Iowa." The recipient knew to reject the call (and charges) because he or she had agreed in advance that if the caller identified himself as Walter, rather than Wally, he was just letting the recipient know where he was. Conversely, had he identified himself as Wally, he had something of greater importance to impart and therefore the recipient was to accept to call, and the charges.

It was among the many examples of the grownups not practicing what they preached.
 

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