Proverbs you didn't understand.

Fed up talking videogames? Why?
User avatar
Peter Crisp
Member
Joined in 2008

PostProverbs you didn't understand.
by Peter Crisp » Sat Mar 17, 2018 1:12 pm

When you were younger did you have any proverbs you completely misunderstood?

I used to play a flight sim and every now and then it would pipe in with "Eat lead and die!" and I honestly thought they meant they wanted them to get lead poisoning which seemed a rather slow cruel way for someone to die. It was many, many years before I realised they just meant getting shot which in hindsight makes more sense I suppose :fp: .

So, it's time to share stories about proverbs you just didn't quite get.

Vermilion wrote:I'd rather live in Luton.
User avatar
still
Member
Joined in 2008

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by still » Sat Mar 17, 2018 1:14 pm

'Cheap at half the price'. Well it would be!

User avatar
<]:^D
Member
Joined in 2008

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by <]:^D » Sat Mar 17, 2018 1:14 pm

have your cake and eat it

i thought 'have' meant eat your cake so in my head it was eat your cake and eat it
:lol: :fp:

User avatar
Buffalo
Emeritus
Joined in 2008

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by Buffalo » Sat Mar 17, 2018 1:20 pm

I thought it was ‘patience is avert you’ for an embarrassingly long time. Always wondered why it made no sense to me.

Image
User avatar
Earfolds
Member
Joined in 2008
AKA: Evil Ted
Contact:

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by Earfolds » Sat Mar 17, 2018 1:26 pm

When I was little, I thought the phrase was "wait with baited breath" and wondered what kind of thing would consider the presence of someone's breath bait.

User avatar
rinks
Member
Member
Joined in 2008
Location: Aboard the train that goes around the world

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by rinks » Sat Mar 17, 2018 1:32 pm

still wrote:'Cheap at half the price'. Well it would be!

It's meant to be "cheap at twice the price". Saying it the other way round is a sarcastic way of saying something's expensive, but people are stupid and ended up using the wrong one. (EDIT: Not directed at you!)

Loves us all since 2008
User avatar
Earfolds
Member
Joined in 2008
AKA: Evil Ted
Contact:

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by Earfolds » Sat Mar 17, 2018 1:35 pm

rinks wrote:
still wrote:'Cheap at half the price'. Well it would be!

It's meant to be "cheap at twice the price". Saying it the other way round is a sarcastic way of saying something's expensive, but people are stupid and ended up using the wrong one. (EDIT: Not directed at you!)

Actually, it really is "cheap at half the price", and "cheap at twice the price" is the misunderstanding. The word "cheap" used to mean something different.

User avatar
Lagamorph
Member ♥
Joined in 2010

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by Lagamorph » Sat Mar 17, 2018 1:41 pm

What Americans think they mean when they say "I could care less"
So....you mean that you do actually care then?

Lagamorph's Underwater Photography Thread
Zellery wrote:Good post Lagamorph.
Turboman wrote:Lagomorph..... Is ..... Right
User avatar
rinks
Member
Member
Joined in 2008
Location: Aboard the train that goes around the world

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by rinks » Sat Mar 17, 2018 1:42 pm

Evil Ted wrote:
rinks wrote:
still wrote:'Cheap at half the price'. Well it would be!

It's meant to be "cheap at twice the price". Saying it the other way round is a sarcastic way of saying something's expensive, but people are stupid and ended up using the wrong one. (EDIT: Not directed at you!)

Actually, it really is "cheap at half the price", and "cheap at twice the price" is the misunderstanding. The word "cheap" used to mean something different.

OK, didn't know that. Cheers.

It's still stupid, though.

Loves us all since 2008
User avatar
Earfolds
Member
Joined in 2008
AKA: Evil Ted
Contact:

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by Earfolds » Sat Mar 17, 2018 1:43 pm

rinks wrote:
Evil Ted wrote:
rinks wrote:
still wrote:'Cheap at half the price'. Well it would be!

It's meant to be "cheap at twice the price". Saying it the other way round is a sarcastic way of saying something's expensive, but people are stupid and ended up using the wrong one. (EDIT: Not directed at you!)

Actually, it really is "cheap at half the price", and "cheap at twice the price" is the misunderstanding. The word "cheap" used to mean something different.

OK, didn't know that. Cheers.

It's still stupid, though.

It was kinda stupid originally, yeah. The original phrase basically boils down to "cheap things are cheap".

User avatar
rinks
Member
Member
Joined in 2008
Location: Aboard the train that goes around the world

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by rinks » Sat Mar 17, 2018 1:50 pm

I'm going to widen the scope of the thread here, partly because I'm a gooseberry fool, and partly because Pete called "Eat lead and die" a proverb.

I found out that Tiffany's "I Think We're Alone Now", a hit from my youth, was actually a cover version only last week, when I watched 10 Cloverfield Lane.

Loves us all since 2008
User avatar
Mini E
Doctor
Joined in 2008

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by Mini E » Sat Mar 17, 2018 1:53 pm

Again - widening the scope of the thread - I couldn't understand cash points. I spent my early childhood thinking that "Free cash here" by an ATM meant that you could literally just get free money and I couldn't understand why there weren't constantly queues for the free cash.

User avatar
Dangerblade
Member
Joined in 2008

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by Dangerblade » Sat Mar 17, 2018 3:33 pm

Still, to this day, can never remember if it's "let alone" or "yet alone"

User avatar
Joer
Member
Joined in 2008

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by Joer » Sat Mar 17, 2018 4:00 pm

I used to think it was "can't be asked" and got a massive telling off at school for it until the teacher realised I was just being thick and let me off.

User avatar
Saint of Killers
Member
Member
Joined in 2008

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by Saint of Killers » Sat Mar 17, 2018 4:10 pm

<]:^D wrote:have your cake and eat it

i thought 'have' meant eat your cake so in my head it was eat your cake and eat it
:lol: :fp:


Joer wrote:I used to think it was "can't be asked" and got a massive telling off at school for it until the teacher realised I was just being thick and let me off.


:!: I'm not alone! Though I don't think the second one is really a proverb...

And the cake one couldn't be less clear if they tried! (Because these days have can mean eat. "They" should change it to He wants to keep his cake and eat it. Which is still clunky but the meaning is more clear.)

User avatar
Peter Crisp
Member
Joined in 2008

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by Peter Crisp » Sat Mar 17, 2018 5:15 pm

Also what kind of person has a cake and doesn't eat it?
That's not only wasteful it's rude to the person who baked the cake.

Cake only exists to be eaten :x .

Vermilion wrote:I'd rather live in Luton.
User avatar
Earfolds
Member
Joined in 2008
AKA: Evil Ted
Contact:

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by Earfolds » Sat Mar 17, 2018 5:30 pm

It used to be the other way round, you can't eat your cake and (still) have it, but it got swapped around for reasons unclear.

User avatar
Victor Mildew
Member
Joined in 2009

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by Victor Mildew » Sat Mar 17, 2018 7:14 pm

Evil Ted wrote:It used to be the other way round, you can't eat your cake and (still) have it, but it got swapped around for reasons unclear.


Igotthatreference.gif

Hexx wrote:Ad7 is older and balder than I thought.
User avatar
Rapidly-Greying
Member
Joined in 2008
Location: Kelty, scotland
Contact:

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by Rapidly-Greying » Sat Mar 17, 2018 8:40 pm

A hot sausage pickles the sun chime.

Rapidly-greying is Mediocre to Average at games :fp:
7256930752

PostRe: Proverbs you didn't understand.
by 7256930752 » Sat Mar 17, 2018 8:49 pm

Rapidly-Greying wrote:A hot sausage pickles the sun chime.

That's a euphemism, no?

I'm also going off on a tangent; Estuary English, why do people train themselves to talk like this and claim it's natural?


Return to “Stuff”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Grumpy David, jimbojango, Monkey Man, Rich and 627 guests