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Posted

A couple from the uk regarding currency.

 

Thrupence

Two bob.

 

also tanner (meaning sixpence)

dollar (which in my childhood was slang for five shillings- how things have changed!)

 

 

 

 

Posted

We all use slang in our language, it's part of how languages evolve, slang words become part of a language and slowly change that language. But there are also words or phrases that fall out of usage, words that no longer have meaning. Things like Drug Store Cowboy, does anyone remember what that means? Be fair, don't google it if you don't know what it means. Car hop? Soda jerk? How long before hacker become something no one knows what it means? How about sharing some of the words and phrases you remember that no long have real meaning in our society...

 

Drug Store Cowboy

 

Car Hop

 

Soda Jerk

 

My dad was a soda jerk when he was young, and we had car hops when I was a kid. It was a big deal for us to go out to the drive-in for a burger, fries and a shake and have the car hop hang the tray on your window.

 

Dungerees?

Slacks?

 

The US navy only recently did away with dungarees. I associate "slacks" with "polyester". Ugh.

Posted

it might be interesting to not only know the out of date phrases but what they have been replaced with as well.

 

Drugstore Cowboy = Poser...

 

My dad was a soda jerk when he was young, and we had car hops when I was a kid. It was a big deal for us to go out to the drive-in for a burger, fries and a shake and have the car hop hang the tray on your window.

 

If you ever come to Wilmington, NC let me know, I'll take where they still do that in the original parking lot/small building of the drive-in restaurant that has been in operation here at least fifty years, my wife's parents ate there when they were dating... they still serve the same flat burgers...

 

The US navy only recently did away with dungarees. I associate "slacks" with "polyester". Ugh.

 

Ok, it's that kind of attitude that ended my career as a polyester maker, I was very good at making the finest Dacron, oh yes....

Posted

Is that why all the new recruitment posters show sailors only from the waist up?

 

Don't ask, don't tell.

 

High and dry, bought the farm... kicked the bucket.

 

I still use those.

Posted (edited)

I'm quite fond of "and all that jazz . . . "

So was my mother who used to say it. The song "All that Jazz" from "Chicago" always makes me smile! I'll resist my new found skill of posting a video.smile.gif

Edited by Joatmon
Posted
High and dry, bought the farm... kicked the bucket.

I still use those.

Oh! I thought we were looking for phrases where the etiology's been left in the lurch. Things we say, but don't really know why they mean what they mean... humm.. shiver me timbers I must be three sheets to the wind :)

Posted

A word I seem to remember well from the 1950's ( let's say when I was between the ages of 17 and 21) which doesn't seem to used much these days is "No!"

Posted (edited)

I still use nautical terms like 'Three sheets to the wind'. My old 'Gaff' was in 'Pompey' see.

I remember when I was a saucepan, bein' three sheets, dane tane, freezin brass monkeys.

Edited by tomgwyther

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