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#13479 02/01/01 01:38 PM
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of troy Offline OP
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or other animal saying--
In our house if something fell short of perfect alignment-- it was likely to be condemed as "Crooked as a ram's horn"




#13480 02/01/01 04:21 PM
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[crooked]
We always refer to con men and other suspicious characters as "crooked as a dog's hind leg."


#13481 02/02/01 10:13 PM
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Surely most of these sayings are "Tongue in cheek."

wow


#13482 02/02/01 10:37 PM
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um, i was kinda happy that this thread was dying. even with cable, it takes forever to load. thanks, wow. [ch*tongue*eek grumbling emoticon]

bridget=)

Ipsa scientia potestas est ~Bacon

#13483 02/03/01 12:18 AM
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How about "gird your loins"....however, not sure what it means...maybe I wouldn't mention if I did????


#13484 02/06/01 07:12 PM
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"Gird your loins" is nothing obscene... it admonishes one to prepare (mentally and emotionally) for a tough task at hand.


#13485 02/06/01 10:58 PM
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And on the clothing theme we could speak of pulling onesself (one's self? oneself? ) up by one's bootstraps.


#13486 02/07/01 05:01 AM
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In reply to:

"Gird your loins" is nothing obscene... it admonishes one to prepare (mentally and emotionally) for a tough task at hand.


Yes, I know that's what it means, but why does it mean that? It's obviously a metaphor, but what is the original loin-girding that gave rise the metaphor?

Bingley



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#13487 02/07/01 07:16 AM
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Actually, "to gird one's loins" originally meant to put on the accoutrement of war, the sword belt which hung low across the loins. I can't discover exactly how old it is, but I would suggest Anglo-Saxon or Norman. The meaning later drifted to the action itself. "Gird yourself for something." Now it just means, as has been said previously, to get ready to do something.



The idiot also known as Capfka ...
#13488 02/07/01 08:12 AM
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Actually, "to gird one's loins" originally meant to put on the accoutrement of war, the sword belt which hung low across the loins. I can't discover exactly how old it is, but I would suggest Anglo-Saxon or Norman.

Older I think, CapK - the imagery is used in the Bible as well, at Ephesians 6:14, and 1 Peter 1:13, according to a interlinear translation I have.


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