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> Unidentified Flying Oddball (1979) (Spaceman in King Arthur's Court, A (1979))
None of these looks like Disney....
Being a child of the '70s I seem to remember this last one as being a Disney film. The name certainly fits the bill, anyway!
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> Could you please provide some enlightenment on your rhyme examples? Thanks to Dick Francis, this septic does at least understand the concept. I just don't know the particulars. The closest I could come for syrup is 'hair up', and somehow I don't think that's it!
A cinch, jackie! Syrup of figs - wigs!!! Remember, you don't rhyme the known word. You build a phrase from it and rhyme that phrase.
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Syrup comes from the rhyme of "syrup and fig" which goes to "wig" therefore haircut/wig/toupee...
Another is "pony" for "not very good": "pony and trap" = crap
And "septic" comes from "septic tank" = yank
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'... those of us who live in the South (the Dixie cups)..." Gosh, golly. How things do come up per chance. I have no idea what 'Dixie cups' refer to in the above, perhaps some-one could patiently explain ... BUT ... perhaps there might also be an incidental answer to something that I've often wondered about. Why on earth do we in Oz refer to small round tubs of ice-cream, characteristically bought at the cinema, as 'Dixies' ? Is there any connection at all, at all?
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Hi, Lucy-- Dixie cups are a brand of throwaway small paper cups, designed to be pulled out of a dispenser next to a water cooler or drinking fountain. I believe they were touted as being more hygienic than regular glasses, or the kind of fountain where the person in front of you might have put his germy mouth right on the spicket. They became VERY popular, even in private homes, during the polio scare of the '50's. I think the reason Anna used that term is that she lives in "Dixieland". (Technically, I do too, but Kentucky was neutral during the American Civil War, and is not the "Deep South" geographically.)
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Thank you Jackie. We have those water coolers (and cups) here too, but I have never heard the cups referred to as dixies. However, the application of 'dixies' to our little ice-cream 'buckets' makes sense.
'Spicket'?? Not used here at all, although I can guess at the meaning from your context. A useful word - wonder how long it would take to get it into common use here.
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>>The closest I could come for syrup is 'hair up', and somehow I don't think that's it!
A cinch, jackie! Syrup of figs - wigs!!! Remember, you don't rhyme the known word. You build a phrase from it and rhyme that phrase.<<
Well--I was closer than I thought!
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Lucy-- Isn't that one of the great fringe benefits of this Board? Someone uses a word without even thinking about it, and someone else sees it with amazement! I have enjoyed the dialogues about different terms used in Great Britain, Canada, and the "lands down-under" so much--even though I've never heard of a lot of them! I never really gave much thought, before this, to needing an interpreter for another native-English speaker! Er--Lucy, your bio doesn't say, but did I pick up from one of the threads that you live in Great Britain (if you don't mind)?
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>'Spicket'?? Not used here at all
how 'bout "spigot" (faucet), a more standard spelling?
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Lucy, "Spicket" in the U.S. South may well be "spigot" in your neck.... I guess Dixie cups is an example of the brand name taking over the generic, as Jackie suggested. It's funny, though, the makers of Dixie cups live in the North of the US, not the South. If you ever get a chance, check out the makers of those little paper cups, both ice cream and drinking fountain. I'd be curious to know if they're made by a subsidiary of the Dixie folks.
As for "wig", I'd never have gotten that since I haven't a clue as to what "syrup of figs" is. A digestive aid, maybe?
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