• Our booking engine at tickets.railforums.co.uk (powered by TrainSplit) helps support the running of the forum with every ticket purchase! Find out more and ask any questions/give us feedback in this thread!

Old sayings that you heard in your childhood.

Status
Not open for further replies.
Sponsor Post - registered members do not see these adverts; click here to register, or click here to log in
R

RailUK Forums

Calthrop

Established Member
Joined
6 Dec 2015
Messages
3,305
Something just come to mind, after a couple of weeks -- triggered by "Scrabble" doings: we had a mildly silly handed-down family thing, about pronounceable alphabetical order: which went "abbersee-deffigee-kellemen-opacue-rustuvee-doubleyou-ex-wy-zed". As a somewhat language-obsessed kid, I observed that the third element therein, omitted three letters; and could be easily amended to "hijklemen". My mother, who held family traditions in quasi-religious esteem, was adamant that: no, it was "kellemen" -- "end-of".
 

Mcr Warrior

Veteran Member
Joined
8 Jan 2009
Messages
11,854
Something just come to mind, after a couple of weeks -- triggered by "Scrabble" doings: we had a mildly silly handed-down family thing, about pronounceable alphabetical order: which went "abbersee-deffigee-kellemen-opacue-rustuvee-doubleyou-ex-wy-zed". As a somewhat language-obsessed kid, I observed that the third element therein, omitted three letters; and could be easily amended to "hijklemen". My mother, who held family traditions in quasi-religious esteem, was adamant that: no, it was "kellemen" -- "end-of".
Your mother was evidently Enid Blyton, and I now claim my £5. o_O
 

Gloster

Established Member
Joined
4 Sep 2020
Messages
8,440
Location
Up the creek
I must have been very young (circa 1950) when people used to say they were "stuck for bobbins". I never knew what that meant and seventy years later, I am still no wiser. Does anyone know what it means?
A quick googling suggests that it is an old Lancashire expression. Bobbins are what the cotton came on in the mills, so if you had no bobbins, you had no cotton and could not do any work (or, probably, get any pay). Hence, it means ‘have nothing to do’. I am far from being a dialect specialist, but this seems logical: I hope it is not folk etymology.
 

Killingworth

Established Member
Joined
30 May 2018
Messages
4,890
Location
Sheffield
One I heard this week that I hadn't heard for a long time "if that's my lunch I've had it." Spoken by a native of Hull but used by my father in Newcastle, . Tea or dinner might get the same comment, meaning ready to move on..
 

Bobdogs

On Moderation
Joined
19 Dec 2017
Messages
167
Location
Carmarthenshire
Sayings in use in Yorkshire in the 1950s-60s, included:-

"That's summat or nowt" meaning something insignificant [interestingly, Ian McMillan in his book about Yorkshire reverses it and calls it "Neither Nowt Nor Summat].
"All fizz and no pop" used of a showy, but unreliable person.
And, when in desperation at trying to tell someone they were wrong, we'd say "Nay, I've told and better told him"
And one my father used of something that was broken was "it's gone for a Burton" [Something, I think, to do with Burton's tailoring and wooden overcoats - possibly of an RAF origin]
Going for a Burton goes back to the days of the Raj.
One of the breweries in Burton upon Trent (I cannot remember which one) brewed a light ale which could be shipped to the subcontinent and retain its quality. Hence the expression which was used in India and entered popular speech when ex-pats came home.

Living over the brush.
Unmarried couple living together.
Her at no5 is living over the brush with him from Unigate.
Or he came from the other side of the blanket.i.e illigitimate.

Honest injun. My mum would make me say that if she wrongly suspected me of lying.
Until about a year ago I thought it was a different single word honestingin.

Jobs a good un. Unfailing and annoying utterance by a work colleague when we had tipped the last bin at the end of the shift
 
Last edited:

61653 HTAFC

Veteran Member
Joined
18 Dec 2012
Messages
17,679
Location
Another planet...
A quick googling suggests that it is an old Lancashire expression. Bobbins are what the cotton came on in the mills, so if you had no bobbins, you had no cotton and could not do any work (or, probably, get any pay). Hence, it means ‘have nothing to do’. I am far from being a dialect specialist, but this seems logical: I hope it is not folk etymology.
"Bobbins" is also an old slang term from the Heavy Woollen District of West Yorkshire: if something was described as "bobbins" it was either nonsense or of poor quality, depending on context. I now wonder if this came about as a jibe at the rival textile trade from over the hills...
 

Busaholic

Veteran Member
Joined
7 Jun 2014
Messages
14,091
'' Good as gold'', used almost as one word. ''Oh,yes, the kids were good-as-gold'' etc. Refers to the old Gold Standard, I believe.
 

THC

Member
Joined
21 Sep 2009
Messages
471
Location
Stuck on the GEML
When, as a child, I asked my father how to get anywhere he'd always reply, "turn left at Shepherd's Bush beach". Both my parents are from the west of Ireland so I presume he picked it up when he started with LT in the late 1960s.

THC
 

Xenophon PCDGS

Veteran Member
Joined
17 Apr 2011
Messages
32,423
Location
A semi-rural part of north-west England
A saying heard in Miles Platting in the 1950s was "Don't forget to cover the coalhole" (that was the circular pavement hole with a cast iron circular lid with a metal chain attached that the coal delivery man tipped his coal delivery into the cellar)
 

Mcr Warrior

Veteran Member
Joined
8 Jan 2009
Messages
11,854
"Bobbins" is also an old slang term from the Heavy Woollen District of West Yorkshire: if something was described as "bobbins" it was either nonsense or of poor quality, depending on context. I now wonder if this came about as a jibe at the rival textile trade from over the hills...
Not sure if that was actually the case, but it does seem that the term "bobbins" (meaning something of little or no worth, deriving from spools in a cotton mill with no cotton thread left on them) has historical currency on both sides of the Pennines!
 

Xenophon PCDGS

Veteran Member
Joined
17 Apr 2011
Messages
32,423
Location
A semi-rural part of north-west England
Not sure if that was actually the case, but it does seem that the term "bobbins" (meaning something of little or no worth, deriving from spools in a cotton mill with no cotton thread left on them) has historical currency on both sides of the Pennines!
As a young child, I recall that any broken wooden bobbins were allowed to be taken home by the millworkers in the Ancoats area of Manchester and used for firewood as both paint and varnish were on them which made them burn easily.

I have just remembered that anyone who looked "in authority" in the local park were all called "parkies".
 
Last edited:

swt_passenger

Veteran Member
Joined
7 Apr 2010
Messages
31,442
If you don’t do <whatever> soon, they’ll be coming round to cut off your gas and water…
 

Calthrop

Established Member
Joined
6 Dec 2015
Messages
3,305
"Love a duck". When surprised.

Coming in late here -- but I'd figured that this had long been a common and well-known one: indeed generally expressive of surprise / consternation -- big in Cockney-speak ("Lor luv-a-duck !"). Have heard it -- not in childhood ! -- in a more "robust" version: with first word of the three, not "love", but a well-known expletive which rhymes with "duck". One wonders whether the expression first arose in this pithy, rhyming form; and was later adapted to the "love" version, to make it fit for family, and general polite-society, use.
 

Busaholic

Veteran Member
Joined
7 Jun 2014
Messages
14,091
I have just remembered that anyone who looked "in authority" in the local park were all called "parkies".
That was true in S.E. London too: they were always dressed in brown, including their hats. Being the 1950s, hats were always worn. Women 'parkies' didn't exist, in that part of the country at least.
 

Xenophon PCDGS

Veteran Member
Joined
17 Apr 2011
Messages
32,423
Location
A semi-rural part of north-west England
In local areas where two captains of street teams playing football or cricket chose players for their teams, there was always one left over at the end who was called "Piffy on a rock bun" in the Miles Platting area of North Manchester.
 

Mcr Warrior

Veteran Member
Joined
8 Jan 2009
Messages
11,854
In local areas where two captains of street teams playing football or cricket chose players for their teams, there was always one left over at the end who was called "Piffy on a rock bun" in the Miles Platting area of North Manchester.
Meaning superfluous or left out.

Opinions seem to vary as regards who or what "piffy" was exactly.

A variation of the phrase sitting like "Patience on a monument", perhaps, which I believe is a Shakespearean quotation from "Twelfth Night", the 'Patience' referred to being a stone statue of a figure often to be found sat on top of / adorning a tombstone.
 

PeterY

Established Member
Joined
2 Apr 2013
Messages
1,315
My father often used to say "were you lot born in a barn?" to me and my siblings when we left doors open. Also "more lights than Blackpool illuminations" when we left the lights on. :lol:
 

Mat17

Member
Joined
17 Aug 2019
Messages
759
Location
Barnsley
My grandfather always used to say, "stop acting goat", i.e. stop messing about.

Maybe it was just him, maybe it's a Yorkshire thing.
 

Mcr Warrior

Veteran Member
Joined
8 Jan 2009
Messages
11,854
My grandfather always used to say, "stop acting goat", i.e. stop messing about.

Maybe it was just him, maybe it's a Yorkshire thing.
Think this saying is actually quite well known, more often as "Stop acting the goat" or even "Stop playing the giddy goat" or variations thereof.
 

High Dyke

Established Member
Joined
1 Jan 2013
Messages
4,283
Location
Yellabelly Country
If we were misbehaving my Granny would threaten to 'snicker-sneeze us'. Never did find out the origin of that phrase.

Others used were.
Up the wooden hill to bed.
You'll stop like it if the wind changes, if you pulled silly faces.

I still used "daft as a boiled owl."
 

chorleyjeff

Member
Joined
3 May 2013
Messages
677
I might be a tad older than most (but not all) on the website, so I wonder if "strange sayings" were common at one time.

One that springs to mind from the early 1950s was if two women were very annoyed and argumentative, the term used was " They are playing Hamlet".

"Preston " Down't suff " -- down the drain. I think a suff was a mine drain
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Top