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#25089 03/28/01 09:49 AM
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rodward Offline OP
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From another thread: The word pissed is used in the UK to signify drunk, whereas it means angry in the US. For angry, in the UK, we would use 'pissed off'.

Is there a technical term for the following kind of joke [apart from weak, dreadful, etc]?
Do rowers get one over the eight?
Do brain surgeons get out of their skulls?

I have more which I won't bore you with (yet-) but I am also interested to know how many of these "drunk" expressions are international or UK only. ["Off to trawl past threads for 'separated by a common language' themes" emoticon]



Rod Ward

#25090 03/28/01 11:13 AM
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Dunno if there is a term for the type of joke, but it seems to come from the same family as the 'Tom Swifties' (another thread somewhere here), and the old t-shirt ones: "Dress designers do it in style", "Accountants do it with double entries" and so on.

cheer

the sunshine warrior

ps: bladdered, wasted, out of it, arseholed come to mind...


#25091 03/28/01 12:34 PM
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Do rowers get one over the eight?
Do brain surgeons get out of their skulls?


Rowers get out of their sculls, obviously.


#25092 03/28/01 12:53 PM
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rodward Offline OP
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I'm glad someone took the bait. I only noticed as I proofed it, but decided to leave it hanging.

Rod Ward

#25093 03/28/01 01:12 PM
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Do rowers get one over the eight?

Seen on the back of a midget's T shirt at a head race

Because the cox can't stroke itself

BTW; I haven't the foggiest notion what one over the eight means.


#25094 03/28/01 08:42 PM
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Editors do it on deadline
wow


#25095 03/29/01 11:00 AM
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rodward Offline OP
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One over the eight = drunk. A widely understood, but probably old fashioned term in UK. Presumably 8 pints (or double scotches) is just enough, nine is way too many.

Rod Ward

#25096 03/29/01 11:25 AM
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<<over the eights: nine's too many>>

I have read about a similar source for "mind your Ps and Qs," a line once used to admonish sailors going ashore leave to "mind [their] pints and quarts."


#25097 03/29/01 11:45 AM
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magicians do it with mirrors...


#25098 03/29/01 12:50 PM
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"Three sheets to the wind" is the one my mom uses... I know it's a sailing reference (Or rather, I suspect it's a sailing reference...), but have never gotten a confirm on that. Anyone? Anyone?


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