Szia,
Ma tovåbb folytatjuk a tegnap elkezdett vicces témåt, és ismét néhåny mókås kifejezés következik.
A hĂ©ten Ășj tĂ©mĂĄba kezdĂŒnk, Ă©s az közelgĆ ĂĄprilisra valĂł tekintettel, tartunk egy vicces hetet.
Ne feledd minden idĆk legkedvezmĂ©nyesebb ĂĄrĂș nyomtatott 5 Perc Angol magazin elĆfizetĂ©sĂ©t sem, amely most egy Ă©vre 9540 forint helyett csak 6500 forintba kerĂŒl!
12 lapszĂĄm, több mint 1100 oldal Ă©s 12 Ăłra hanganyag, nagyjĂĄbĂłl 540 forint havonta, szĂĄllĂtĂĄssal egyĂŒtt!
Az akciĂł mĂĄrcius 31-ig Ă©l! Le ne maradjatok rĂłla:)
MEGRENDELĂS: ITT
JĂł tanulĂĄst!
Ădv,
NĂłri
MAI LECKE
The Origins of 11 Funny Animal-Related Sayings
Chances are, youâve uttered an animal-related saying recently – did you go âchew the cudâ with a pal? Wonder what it would like to be âa fly on the wallâ? Perhaps you went and âlooked a gift horse in the mouthâ?âbut you still might not know where such freely used adages came from. A âdoggie bagâ might sound obvious, and clams sure look happy enough, but the origins of various animal-related sayings are often more complicated (and fun) than youâd expect.
1. DOGGIE BAG
Although the term âdoggie bagâ might sound relatively self-explanatory – hey, itâs leftovers for your pet! – the saying actually has a surprisingly interesting history. During World War II, food was scarce for everyone (including pets), but that didnât help curb restaurant wastefulness; packaging up leftovers (regardless of who they were for) wasnât yet standard practice. Eventually, a group of San Francisco cafes began to offer âPet Pakitsâ to their diners in order to zip their scraps home to the furry ones. The practice soon spread around the country, ensuring that restaurant waste went down and the spread of doggie bags went way up.
2. WHEN PIGS FLY
Various iterations of sayings about piggies flying have existed for centuries. Itâs believed that the first use of a flying pig comment (in appropriate sassy and disbelieving context) appeared in John Withalsâ 1616 English-Latin dictionary, A Shorte Dictonarie for Yonge Begynners. The dictionary included a list of proverbs, which included âpigs fly in the ayre with their tayles forward.â
3. BUSY AS A BEE
It was Geoffrey Chaucer who gave us this particular saying. The first known use of a busy bee adage appeared in his Canterbury Tales. In âThe Squireâs Tale,â a passage reads: âLo, suche sleightes and subtilitees/âšIn wommen be; for ay as busy as bees/âšBe thay us seely men for to desceyve,/âšAnd from a soth ever a lie thay weyve.âš/And by this Marchaundes tale it proveth wel.â
4. WILD GOOSE CHASE
Although William Shakespeare is believed to be the first author to use the phrase âwild-goose chaseâ (it appears in Romeo & Juliet), his version of such a chase referred to a type of horse race that was popular during his time. It wasnât until centuries later when it appeared in its current form in 1811. By then, it had been defined as âa tedious uncertain pursuit, like the following a flock of wild geese, who are remarkably shy.” Sounds about right!
5. AS HAPPY AS A CLAM
The first mention of seemingly smiling clams was published in 1833, in James Hallâs The Harpeâs Head: A Legend of Kentucky, “It never occurred to him to be discontented…He was as happy as a clam.” But although Hallâs mention appears to be the first on record, the actual saying is âas happy as a clam at high water,â reflecting the one time of day that clams and their ilk donât have to worry about land-loving predators. That saying popped up in an 1844 edition of The Adams Sentinel, a Pennsylvania newspaper, and is still considered to be the appropriate version to use when quoting the adage.
6. BLACK SHEEP
Black animals have long been viewed as bad omens, and although black cats seems to have gotten the bulk of in-person fears, sheep have been saddled with the most popular saying regarding their fur pigmentation. Itâs unclear why this happenedâsome sources blame an unchecked version of a 1535 Bible (which muddled the story of Jacob and his flock of animals, making it sound as if black sheep were the ones cast out, which isnât true to the original text), but a clearer version pops up in Thomas Shepardâs 1640 text, The Sincere Convert. Shepard wrote, âcast out all the Prophane people among us, as drunkards, swearers, whores, lyers, which the Scripture brands for blacke sheepe, and condemnes them.â Not very nice.
7. CAT GOT YOUR TONGUE?
Itâs believed that this adageâa snappy remark made to a silent personâsomehow sprung up from kidsâ stories. The first appearance of it in print already derided it as a childrenâs saying, though no previous versions of it, in books or magazines, have been found. It appeared inBallouâs Monthly Magazine in 1881, in a single line that read: âhas the cat got your tongue, as the children say?â
8. IN THE DOGHOUSE
Itâs long been believed that the term âin the doghouseâ first appeared in J.M. Barrieâs Peter Panâafter all, beloved father Mr. Darling sends himself to the dogâs house as a personal penance for letting his kids be temporarily stolen by their high-flying new palâbut the saying was around much earlier. An actual definition of the term (âin dog house, in disfavorâ) appeared in J.J. Finertyâs 1926 book Criminalese, a book meant to share âthe language of criminals.â
9. RED HERRING
This one is actually fairly complicated. Although itâs easy enough to locate the first use of âred herringâ in a textâpenned by John Heywood in 1546, as part of a glossary of proverbs he compiledâitâs less obvious how the saying developed its meaning (âsomething misleadingâ). Although some people believe it springs from the old use of fish to throw off the scent of hunting dogs, most believe we owe the tricky saying to an actual trick.
In 1672, British clergyman Jasper Mayne died, leaving behind a trunk for one of his servants, who popped it open (expecting something good), only to find it was filled with herring. Although that herring was salted, later reports referred to it as being red, a mistake on top of some misdirection. But other etymologists trace the story to a 19th century article in theWeekly Political Register criticizing the British press for false reporting on Napoleon’s defeat, taking their attention off of domestic issues. To illustrate the story, he invented a story of a young boy dragging a red herring to distract hunting dogs. Despite being fictional, it might be the origin of the hunt myth.
10. SWAN SONG
The idea that swans âsingâ just before they die has been disproven time and time again, although that hasnât stopped the spread of this saying. In fact, Pliny the Elder included a mention of the falsehood-rooted saying in his A Natural History, all the way back in A.D. 77. Still, the âswan songâ saying and ideation pops up in the works of Shakespeare, Coleridge, and Chaucer, proving that no one can avoid a poetic vision, even if itâs false.
11. THE BEEâS KNEES
Tempted to dismiss this one as âflapper talkâ? Youâre not the only one. Although âthe beeâs kneesâ has been around as a purposely nonsensical saying since the 18th century, it was only adopted into its current use (as âsomething coolâ) during the Roaring Twenties. Even in a 1922 newspaper article in Ohioâs The Newark Advocate that sought to explain various new wave terms, the piece declared âthatâs flapper talk,â just another saying appropriated by the young andhip.
source: mentalfloss
Read the definitions and find the adage that means the same from the text.
1. an unnoticed observer of a particular situation
2. acontainer for leftover food to be carried home from a meal eaten at a restaurant
3. away of saying that something will never happen
4. very active and energetic; hardworking
5. afoolish and hopeless search for or pursuit of something unattainable
6. extremely happy
7. amember of a family or group who is regarded as a disgrace to it
8. If someone asks that, they want to know why you are not speaking when they think you should
9. to be in disfavor
10. something misleading
11. the final performance or activity of a person’s career
12. something cool, the height of excellence
Key:
1. afly on the wall
2. doggie bag
3. when pigs fly
4. busy as a bee
5. wild goose chase
6. as happy as a clam
7. black sheep
8. Cat got your tongue?
9. inthe doghouse
10. red herring
11. swan song
12. the beeâs knees