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#106483 06/25/2003 7:21 PM
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Carpal Tunnel
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Isn't this the same as "pushing your buttons"?


#106484 06/25/2003 7:33 PM
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Same difference?

I dunno. I think I see a shade of difference, but it's mighty shady.




#106485 06/25/2003 7:38 PM
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...it's mighty shady.

As opposed to "slim shady"?

I suppose one would get your goat by pushing your buttons.


#106486 06/25/2003 8:40 PM
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wwh Offline
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Here's a URL about "get your goat":
http://phrases.shu.ac.uk/bulletin_board/10/messages/1015.html
It alleges that goats used to be kept with nervous race horses to calm them, and taking goat away would upset them.


#106487 06/26/2003 2:26 AM
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Well, getting your goat could also "ruffle your feathers".


#106488 06/26/2003 2:53 AM
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And if your feathers were ruffled, you'd be madder than a wet hen.

I'd heard the goat/horse connection--and actually thought we'd discussed it here a while back. ? And I think horses can become attached to other animals as well--chickens and mad wet hens and such.


#106489 06/26/2003 9:18 AM
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dxb Offline
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Surely ‘pushing your buttons’ produces a reaction that is predictable but may be for good or bad whereas something that ‘gets your goat’ is always annoying.


#106490 06/26/2003 2:33 PM
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Interesting, dxb. I would never consider someone's 'pushing my buttons' as being a good thing out there in the real world. But I have read the term applied sexually in which some apparent good had been indicated. Did I say that delicately enough so as not to push anyone's angry little buttons?


#106491 06/26/2003 3:16 PM
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dxb Offline
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The term seems to be associated with the expression "He knows the right buttons to push", that is he knows how to persuade people (in an organisation perhaps) to provide the result he wants. But you've made me uncertain now - beset by doubts I am - as to whether this is typical UK usage or just what I *think is typical UK usage!

I too have read the term applied sexually, but can't speak for its accuracy as my formative years preceded the rediscovery of sex in the UK. We're typically a number of years behind America in most things.


#106492 06/26/2003 10:59 PM
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Zed Offline
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I agree with dxb pushing your buttons produces a reaction which is predictable but it is generally for the benifit or amusement of the pusher not the pushee. and so often what amuses button pushers is getting someone elses goat buy ruffling their feathers until they're as mad as a wet hen.



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