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#103643 05/20/2003 10:35 AM
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Does anyone have favourite similes, metaphors or other comparisons? At Primary School we had an excellent teacher of English, Miss Googe – as remarked on an earlier thread, the names of good teachers stay with you. She introduced us to some basic rhetoric, though we didn’t know it was that, and I still recall being charmed at the thought of “a line of pylons striding up the hillside”.

This simile from Terry Pratchett struck me as original:

“…as self-centred as a gyroscope…”

A cleverly turned phrase, if you’ll forgive the pun. Has it been used before I wonder?




#103644 05/20/2003 10:42 AM
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learned from my mother, old as the hills i am sure, but i still like it:

As crooked as a ram's horn!



#103645 05/20/2003 11:07 AM
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From my mother:

As nervous as a long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs.


#103646 05/20/2003 12:32 PM
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From my aunt, when I was late arriving for a meal: we waited for you like one pig waits for another.


#103647 05/20/2003 1:28 PM
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One gleaned from the pages of Pogo allus struck my fancy:

Prouder'n a pig with a purple pocklebook.


#103648 05/20/2003 4:13 PM
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One from my Tennessee Granny, commenting on our clumsy approach to accomplishing a household chore:

"You boys are going after that like you're killing snakes."


#103649 05/20/2003 7:40 PM
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one of my Dad's favorites:
"better than a kick in the pants"

hmm. "in" the pants, as opposed to "on". hafta think about that one.



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#103650 05/21/2003 1:23 AM
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"better than a kick in the pants"

Which brings to mind:
Beats a poke in the eye with a sharp stick.

And who can forget:
Mallem in aquis vivere,
Nudo semper sub aere,
Quam in hoc mergi pipere

?


#103651 05/21/2003 10:55 AM
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Well, that's swans for you ... I wonder what roast swan tastes like anyway. Ever tried it?


#103652 05/21/2003 11:06 AM
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what roast swan tastes like

Neither with nor without pepper sauce.


#103653 05/21/2003 11:41 AM
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Faintly smelling YART in the air:

"all the chances of a snowflake in hell"


#103654 05/21/2003 12:51 PM
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what roast swan tastes like anyway

ouch!



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#103655 05/21/2003 12:58 PM
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From my husband: Sharp as a marble.


#103656 05/21/2003 2:19 PM
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My Mum/Mom says "better than a kick in the teeth", which is what I also use now. [turning into my mother -e]


#103657 05/21/2003 8:45 PM
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>"all the chances of a snowflake in hell"

Or, my favourite, Douglas Adams' version - "a whelk's chance in a supernova"


#103658 05/22/2003 4:39 AM
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"Going like a cut cat" ...


#103659 05/26/2003 3:38 PM
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My mothers "more roses (or whatever) than you can shake a stick at" and "six of one, half a dozen of the other" for it doesn't matter which.


#103660 06/01/2003 6:46 PM
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A couple I like so well, I snicked them from G.I. Gurdjieff

"Everything is just roses, roses."
"If you go on a spree then go the whole hog, including the postage."

Beelzebub's Tales to His Grandson, a trilogy written by G.I. Gurdjieff is a very interesting trip if anyone is wondering what to read this summer. I think he might have kissed the Blarney Stone at some point in his life


#103661 06/03/2003 3:00 PM
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To express alacrity in preying on someone, verbally or physically: "He was on that boy like white on rice."

To express a large quantity: "They have more [insert commodity here] than Carter's has pills."

The latter expression hails from the southern side of the Mason-Dixon Line, I think. It's a reference to a now defunct product known as Carter's Little Liver Pills, still on the market when I moved to Atlanta in 1963 but not much later than that.


#103662 06/03/2003 3:07 PM
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I knew the Carter's comparison *as "than Carter's has little liver pills." This from a Wisconsin farm girl mother or an urban northern father. It was a few years earlier than 1963.


#103663 06/03/2003 3:27 PM
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I've been puzzled by this one. Anyone know the origin?



#103664 06/03/2003 3:46 PM
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"He was on it like white on rice." Somewhat similar to "He was on it like a goose on a June bug."

The former means he was completely on the job, the idea being that rice is already white, so it's completely covered. The latter just means quickly.



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#103665 06/03/2003 3:54 PM
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What do y'all think "He'll be all over you like a cheap suit" means?


#103666 06/03/2003 4:40 PM
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What do y'all think "He'll be all over you like a cheap suit" means?

Well... a cheap suit would be one that isn't made very well, or doesn't fit you perfectly so it would slide all over you instead of hanging perfectly or fitting snugly. (???)


#103667 06/04/2003 1:01 AM
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One I'm getting tired of hearing: "...like herding cats." Seems to be quite popular with Washington folk these days. Right up there with "the whole nine yards."



#103668 06/04/2003 5:47 AM
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Ever try to herd cats?


#103669 06/04/2003 11:55 AM
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herd cats - we have it with fleas..


#103670 06/04/2003 11:56 AM
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Herding fleas is easy. Just get you a cat.


#103671 06/04/2003 2:09 PM
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I was trying to herd a single cat this morning, and failed utterly. She has a blanky* she usually lies on. Then I get the other two couch cushions to myself. However, today she refused to use the blanky. Nope. Took over the middle couch cushion. Nine-pound cat prevented any human from usefully using the couch! I moved her. She perched on the edge of the couch, and the edge of the blanky, and refused to get on the blanky. Hissed at me for trying to suggest she move over a little! So there we stayed for the better part of the morning, I on the rest of the couch, cat perched uncomfortably on the edge.

* How the heck do you spell blanky? Blankey? Blankie? As in, small blanket? It all starts to look like gibberish after a while.


#103672 06/10/2003 5:54 AM
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Bean - go with blanky, I think.

My favourite - also from my mum (not valued enough as a repository of wisdom, I think!): s/he's not as green as s/he is cabbage looking...


#103673 06/10/2003 9:53 AM
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I like blankie.

Googleizing gets this:

blankie-34,400
blanky-10,400
blankey-18,700

All three show references to small blankets on the first page of each search, but blankie shows more.


#103674 06/10/2003 4:56 PM
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Alexis, I haven't heard that one for years and years and years and ....!

Bean, how about 'blankette' or even 'blanquette', shhh...don't want to start a food thread!


#103675 06/10/2003 9:42 PM
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I love 'like piffy on a rock bun', though I always thought it was a Cornish expression. Quinion has this to say http://www.quinion.com/words/qa/qa-pif1.htm


#103676 06/10/2003 11:40 PM
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Piffy, I like piffy on a rock bun - no-one will know what I mean.
When a joke or idea doesn't work I use my mom's "that went over like a lead balloon"


#103677 06/10/2003 11:41 PM
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One I just heard yesterday from an expatriate Brit:
"Like chalk and cheese." From the context, this corresponds to the US expression "Apples and oranges," when making a point about comparing two things that aren't comparable.


#103678 06/10/2003 11:43 PM
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I like it better than apples and oranges. Apples and oranges *are comparable.


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Just fwiw, I have never heard the expression "comparing chalk and cheese", used in the way I have heard "comparing apples and oranges." The most common use of C&C up here in Zild is in comparing people - "those two are like chalk and cheese". The meaning is closer to "oil and water", or at least conveys an odd pairing. No doubt Pfranz will correct me, but we do the use the phrases "comparing apples with apples" and "apples with oranges" for use hen describing comparisons of things. To my ear, the Zild use of C&C has more to with compatibility than comparability. Just my $0.02


#103680 06/11/2003 1:40 AM
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Hmm. I would have said like chalk and cheese meant incompatible rather than incomparable. Usually said of people who you just know are going to disagree with each other and have endless rows.

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I wasn't chopped-livering you, honest, sjm. You slipped in while I was writing.

Bingley


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Bingley, don't worry. You may be able to spit on it from where you are, but you're still South of the Equator, and Upworlders have to stick together.


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