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#128410 05/08/04 02:35 PM
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musick Offline OP
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"A hair of the dog that bit you" is a phrase used (like you didn't know) meaning "to take an alcoholic drink in the morning after having 'one too many' the evening before". I liken the idea to: if a deep sea diver surfaces too fast he might go back down and surface a little slower to releive "the bends" - or - that a marathon runner, upon finishing a race, isn't supposed to just stop and take a nap. It is safer(?) to cool down gradually. 'nuf said about all that.

Why a hair?

- and -

Any other cannine quips?


#128411 05/08/04 04:47 PM
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can't teach an old dog new tricks.

let sleeping dogs lie.

lie down with dogs, wake up with fleas.

(and i am not much of a dog lover... i suspect those who live and love dogs will know many more.)


#128412 05/12/04 03:16 AM
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old hand
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The last time I had occasion to use that phrase, I used it in the presence of my 5-year-old cousin (who hangs on my every word). She promptly asked "A dog *BIT* you?!?!!?" Which gave me the opportunity to explain metaphor at an age-appropriate level...


#128413 05/12/04 11:42 AM
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And an opportunity to explain that adults sometimes act in ways that they know they will regret the next morning.


#128414 05/12/04 01:30 PM
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I always assumed it had something to do with homeopathic magic: using a bit of the animal to combat the effects of the bite.


#128415 06/18/04 05:37 PM
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>Why a hair?

Wasn't it supposed to be a Medieval remedy or something? I remember reading about it being some kind of cure for rabies - to take a hair (possibly 'cause it's the easiest bit of the dog to get hold of?) of the dog that bit you and either swallow or apply it to the wound. That's as much as I can remember anyway.


#128416 06/18/04 05:39 PM
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It's dog's life
Barking up the wrong tree
His bark is worse than his bite


#128417 06/18/04 06:42 PM
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homeopathic magic

It may be "magic," but isn't this the same principle behind vaccines?


#128418 06/18/04 06:54 PM
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There's contagious magic and sympathetic magic. If it's truly magic of which nuncle speaks, hair of the dog would be sympathetic.

As for homeopathic medicine vs vaccination I believe the big difference in kind is that vaccination is meant to prevent and homeopathic medicine is meant to cure.


#128419 06/23/04 01:47 PM
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Sorry to be so old-fahioned, but I was using homeopathic magic in Sir James Frazer's sense. Also, I believe, called imitative or sympathetic magic.

See http://www.sacred-texts.com/pag/frazer/gb05100.htm



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