Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

They Say Em' From the Golden Era - Slang & Memorable Phrases

Fletch

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,865
Location
Iowa - The Land That Stuff Forgot
Look what the cat dragged in

i often exclaim, without any great irony, "Hot dog," "Oh brother," and "Holy Ned!" (Old Ned was the proprietor of that region not likely to freeze over, which reminds me of another expression.)

I've been known to refer to autoMObiles and loudSPEAKers now and then.

A party is a do, a big dinner a feed (also meaning an accelerator pedal). To indulge in alcohol is to tie one on or bend an elbow, sometimes till one is pie-eyed or half in the bag.

My summer suits aren't white, they're ice cream suits. I sometimes see a picture, rather than a movie. If it (or anything) is really good, it's aces, or all wool and a yard wide.

All kinds of colorful metaphors - knocked @ss over applecart, since (or till) who laid the rails, done to a fare-thee-well, doesn't have the brains god gave dirt.

So long - see ya in the funny papers.
 

klind65

One of the Regulars
Messages
162
Location
New York City
I just remembered another one from some picture I saw long ago:

" It makes me want to spit cotton!"

Doesn't call up the best of images, but I like it! Surely does get the point across! :D
 

Elaina

One Too Many
I use all kinds of slang and old terms for things. Record player covers my MP3, stereo, radio on my dad's satellite...anything that plays music. A refrigerator is an ice box, and always has been and always will be. Things are the bee's knees, I'm a city slicker, things are smooth, I've dated creeps and greasers, we ate a sinker after school, I'm on the level, and how. (I could probably think of more if I wanted to, these are phrases/slang I've used this afternoon). I don't think of it so much as charm, it's things I've said/had used on me all my life.

My granddad still tells me I need to get some feminine cheaters, tho, instead of the Buddy Holly's I wear. And when I feel bad and light headed, I've got a touch of the vapors.

Although, I never affected it AFTER wearing vintage, I always said these things.
 

ThesFlishThngs

One Too Many
Messages
1,007
Location
Oklahoma City
I prefer 'automobile' to car. Like 'the bee's knees'. My husband sometimes calls me 'sister', and we both sometimes end a remark with 'see?'. Of course, with him being Welsh, he has a habit of taking that one further, with 'mun, but'. Which is something only a Taff would do.
 

Viola

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,469
Location
NSW, AUS
Don't remember if I've tipped my hat to expressions like 'from the git-go' or describing things as 'about yea high' already in one of the older incarnations of this thread but I'm pretty sure I haven't yet given their due to exasperated ones like 'you should be so quick into my grave' which is indispensible for driving, and 'it shouldn't happen to a dog.'
 

ShoreRoadLady

Practically Family
For the past year or so, most (if not all - I honestly can't remember!) of my fiction reading has consisted of books written prior to 1970. I'm sure I use a bunch of peculiar phrases that I haven't even picked up on yet, because they're "normal" to me. "Automobile" is one that just slips out. I also use "don't have kittens" (don't overreact) on occasion. There are others, but the fact that certain phrases just aren't used nowadays doesn't occur to me until I open my mouth and realize, "Wait, nobody is going to know what I'm talking about." (Doubly so, since I'm often reading British vintage literature, and I lack a British accent to lend the appropriate colour.)
 

Carlisle Blues

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,154
Location
Beautiful Horse Country
Vintage Words and Phrases

I have been reading fervently regarding the 1920’s lately and I was surprised to see that many words used today are from that era.

For example:

Cat's Meow - Something splendid or stylish;

Darb - An excellent person or thing

Drugstore Cowboy - A young man that hangs out at drugstores or any other place that suits his loafing and usually wears elaborate clothing during the roaring 20's

Take someone for a ride
- Cheat or deliberately mislead someone, [Colloquial; c. 1920];Murder someone, [Slang; 1920]

While these are only a few, I have used these phrases in my every lexicon.

Do you have words and phrases that set era one era apart from another or perhaps that you use today or recognize their meaning?
 

Shangas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,116
Location
Melbourne, Australia
There are dozens of phrases from the 20s and 30s that people still use today. The meanings may have changed a bit in some cases...

'Bimbo' used to mean somoene big and tough. These days it means something rather different. Same for 'Gay'. I had a friend who always referred to a radio as the 'wireless', and he's younger than I am (I'm 22).

I use a fair few of these old phraess and words in everyday speech...once I remember a few, I'll pop them up here (tired at the moment, can't think straight).
 

Shangas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,116
Location
Melbourne, Australia
One of the old 'vintage phrases' I use regularly is 'book'. As in to 'make book'. Not sure how many people know what that means, but it's basically to be really sure and certain of something. You only print (make) a book when everything is sure, certain and correct, so saying you'll make book on something means you're absolutely certain and sure of yourself.
 

Stearmen

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,202
20s

My grandmother who was born in the 19th century, and was young in the Golden Era used to say, "piddle-farting around". I see that it is in the urban dictionary, so it must have made a come back! If you wait long enough, every thing is new again!
 

Miss Crisplock

A-List Customer
Messages
448
Location
Long Beach, CA
This phrase from the golden era just popped in my head:

"Who pissed on your Post-Toasties?"


Used to be common cereal of old people when I was a kid.

Do they still make Post-Toasties?
 

Silver Dollar

Practically Family
Messages
613
Location
Louisville, Kentucky
Stearmen said:
My grandmother who was born in the 19th century, and was young in the Golden Era used to say, "piddle-farting around". I see that it is in the urban dictionary, so it must have made a come back! If you wait long enough, every thing is new again!

That phrase is still in use today. I originally heard it as fiddle farting around.lol

Some of the phrases that are still stuck in my vocabulary: If I repeat any, sorry I just couldn't read all the replies.

To get iced- the current term is to get whacked.
That's jake with me-- it's o.k. with me.
Getting in dutch- getting into trouble
Sleeping with the fishes-- self explanatory.
An old brown shoe-- refers to an old school soldier keen on strict discipline
to get pinched-getting arrested
To filch something--to steal something
 

Bustercat

A-List Customer
Messages
304
Location
Alameda
My grandma-in-law had a great one the other night:

"I was out of there so fast, you'd think I was a wheel."

Love it!
 

Atomic Age

Practically Family
Messages
701
Location
Phoenix, Arizona
Miss Crisplock said:
This phrase from the golden era just popped in my head:

"Who pissed on your Post-Toasties?"


Used to be common cereal of old people when I was a kid.

Do they still make Post-Toasties?


Post Toasties are kind of like Kellogg's Corn Flakes, but of course made by Post. They stopped making them in 2006, but reintroduced them in 2010.

http://www.postcereals.com/cereals/post_toasties/

Doug
 

Wire9Vintage

A-List Customer
Messages
411
Location
Texas
Slightly off topic, but... modern Post Toasties are NOT "real" Post Toasties. They're actually what used to be Grape Nuts Os. Not flakes at all. Why would they do that? Just weird...
 

Forum statistics

Threads
107,361
Messages
3,035,178
Members
52,790
Latest member
ivan24
Top