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Terms Which Have Disappeared

skydog757

A-List Customer
Messages
465
Location
Thumb Area, Michigan
I also recall "I'll settle this hash" or "I'll settle his hash", meaning to resolve an issue or argument. Generally, this was said in irritation or anger about some person and implied physical conflict or the threat of it.
 
There was a brief time in American life, around 1947-48, when the phrase "Open the door!" was never heard without being followed by the word "Richard!"

One of my favorite lines in a Bugs Bunny cartoon is from 1948's High Diving Hare, in which Yosemite Sam forces Bugs to fill in for Fearless Freep in the high diving act. One of Bugs' tricks on Sam is to build a door at the top of the platform, which Sam pounds on demanding Bugs "Open the door...open the door!" At one point Sam breaks the fourth wall, turns to the "camera" and says "notice I didn't say Richard?"
 

Stanley Doble

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,808
Location
Cobourg
Yesterday the starter failed on my car and turned me into a pedestrian. I got to thinking how long it has been since I heard the word pedestrian, it must be 20 or 30 years.
 

Stearmen

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,202
Yesterday the starter failed on my car and turned me into a pedestrian. I got to thinking how long it has been since I heard the word pedestrian, it must be 20 or 30 years.
Now that you mention it, only a few places do we have signs that say yield for Pedestrians. Most are just the standard yellow with the man and women caring a purse stick figures!
 

vitanola

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,254
Location
Gopher Prairie, MI
As a kid I used to be confused when I'd read some magazine or newspaper article where the author criticized society for its "pedestrian tastes." I mean, who didn't like to walk?

Considering the "Melting Pot analogy", as an American I have personally always thought that Protestants, Musselmen and Jewish folk would do well to develop more catholic tastes
 

Stearmen

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,202
Considering the "Melting Pot analogy", as an American I have personally always thought that Protestants, Musselmen and Jewish folk would do well to develop more catholic tastes
As some one who grew up Catholic, school and all, I hope not. We already have enough neurotic people on the loose!:rolleyes:
 

Stanley Doble

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,808
Location
Cobourg
As a kid I used to be confused when I'd read some magazine or newspaper article where the author criticized society for its "pedestrian tastes." I mean, who didn't like to walk?
I wasn't going to reply to this, thinking you were kidding. But just in case you never figured it out the origin of the term probably came from the contrast between the 'carriage trade' and the 'pedestrian trade'.
 

ChiTownScion

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,241
Location
The Great Pacific Northwest
As a kid I used to be confused when I'd read some magazine or newspaper article where the author criticized society for its "pedestrian tastes." I mean, who didn't like to walk?


I remember being about eight when I heard that the British government had just "fallen." I envisioned riots in the streets and another Reign of Terror. Then my dad reassured me that it only means that the prime minister failed to gain a vote of confidence and that there would be a general election in a few weeks. Sometimes, he could really be the incarnation of the well read working man.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,038
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Does anyone still use "crackerjack"to mean "first class"? I never could figure out that one.

I used to have my hair cut at the "Crackerjack Salon," until Mrs. Crackerjack retired a few years ago.

My grandfather used to call something that was crackerjack "a cockah." Eventually I realized what he was saying was "corker," a popular piece of 1910s slang distorted thru his use of Maine dialect.
 
Messages
16,861
Location
New York City
I believe somewhere back in this thread we chatted about "catawampus" being a term that had disappeared. I even think it was Hudson Hawk and I who discussed it. Well, I was blown away this morning reading a WSJ article about the sad state of LaGuardia Airport when this line popped up:

In Concourse B, home to Southwest, Spirit and JetBlue, there are deep cracks in the floor, the slats in the ceiling are catawampus in many places. Some fluorescent lights are dim, some flicker and others are burned out.

So I guess the term hasn't completely disappeared. It was great to see it in use.
 

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