12/08/2010 15:36
Subject: Favorite old fashioned words
Anonymous wrote:"Look at this stormcloud" (my husband's grandmother) describing my little one's grumpy face.
I LOVE this!
Anonymous
12/08/2010 15:24
Subject: Re:Favorite old fashioned words
Copacetic is a current fave!
Anonymous
12/08/2010 14:43
Subject: Favorite old fashioned words
"Holy Christmas!" (that was my grandfather's) and "Look at this stormcloud" (my husband's grandmother) describing my little one's grumpy face.
Anonymous
12/08/2010 12:58
Subject: Favorite old fashioned words
"ants in your pants" - when referring to a child who can't sit still.
Anonymous
12/08/2010 12:52
Subject: Favorite old fashioned words
Corpus bones!
Anonymous
12/08/2010 12:51
Subject: Re:Favorite old fashioned words
I have one friend who talks like he is in a 1940s film noir. He uses chantoosie in normal conversation.
Anonymous
12/08/2010 12:18
Subject: Favorite old fashioned words
I use Elvis as a replacement for God in various swear words/expressions, such as "What in Elvis' name are you doing?"
Anonymous
12/08/2010 11:54
Subject: Favorite old fashioned words
I love Dag-nabbit as a swear alternative
Also my grandmother used to use "kerfuffle" (to ruffle or disarrange) Like as in "when little Tommy brought the wet dog into the formal luncheon, he caused such a kerfuffle among the ladies"
I've never been able to use it in a sentence, but it always makes me smile when I see people fussing over some minor disaster or another.
Anonymous
12/08/2010 11:50
Subject: Re:Favorite old fashioned words
Hanky-Panky
Anonymous
12/08/2010 11:46
Subject: Favorite old fashioned words
Anonymous wrote:Harridan
Shrill harpy
Not that I'm referring to anyone on this board, of course.
Lol. Harridan is a terrible, sexist, enormously evocative word. Molly Shannon and (Patricia?) Wiig on SNL do spot hilarious representations of this terrible stereotype.
Anonymous
12/08/2010 11:28
Subject: Favorite old fashioned words
Harridan
Shrill harpy
Not that I'm referring to anyone on this board, of course.
Anonymous
12/08/2010 11:24
Subject: Re:Favorite old fashioned words
Thirty lashes with a wet noodle. As in...
"You left the cap off the toothpaste again."
"Well, thirty lashes with a wet noodle for me!"
Anonymous
12/08/2010 10:49
Subject: Favorite old fashioned words
I like saying "slacks" instead of "pants"
Anonymous
12/08/2010 08:02
Subject: Favorite old fashioned words
23:34 Both of my parents say "suffering succotash" instead of a more profane expletive. My sibs and I say it when we are around our parents or each other to bring back memories. Also to the PP who doesn't know where "living the life of Riley" comes from: There was an old radio and TV show about (I believe) an airplane assembly worker in California post WWII whose name was Chester Riley. He was always in silly situations and his dear wife, Peg, was his sounding board. I think it was a snippet of upbeat, positive life where problems were trivial. Thus, "Living the Life of Riley" may mean a problem-free life. I still hear it occasionally on Sunday nights on WAMU radio's "Big Broadcast" which plays old radio shows. I am a nostalgia nut.
Anonymous
12/08/2010 00:26
Subject: Re:Favorite old fashioned words
damnation
trousers instead of "pants"
dress down instead of "move over"
paling instead of "fence"
horseplay
rough-housing
"You boys" starts every stern sentence..."are trifling"...ends most.
Christ on a cracker!-- Is that gangster? From like the 1920s? Al Capone? Or Chicago housewife 2010?
And oh yeah, Huzzah is a great one. Mostly, I would write that, but never say it.