Old country sayings

ImJustKCClone

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SOB is dug in like an Alabama tick......and he ain't got time to bleed.

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Had to google that - I knew I'd heard it...
 

ImJustKCClone

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My mom went to UNI with a girl who she was roommates with in the 80s who had indoor plumbing for the first time in her dorm. Roommate grew up somewhere deep off the grid in iowa and was one of like a dozen siblings
My cousin didn't get running water & indoor plumbing until somewhere in the late 90s. He had electricity, but the county laws stated what kind of septic system he needed to install (the Hill Country sits on limestone & shale, and is riddled with underground caverns) and he didn't want to spend the money. His kids were in high school & college when he finally broke down & installed it.
 

Bipolarcy

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My mom always said "Straining gnats and swallowing camels" referring to someone sweating the small stuff while ignoring the bigger problems.

She also used to say, "they can kill me but they can't eat me," which to me meant don't pay attention to mean things people say.

Another one she used to say after a meal was, "I've had a great sufficiency. Anymore would be an excess superfluousness."

"I'm hungrier than boar shoat in a cob pile," is one I've heard all my life.

Ironically, I used to work with a millennial, who always accused me of making stuff up whenever I used one of these sayings, and I've used just about every one listed in this thread at some time or another. I told the whippersnapper that there's an invention called Google and if you think I made it up, put down your video game for a second, look it up on there and it will show you that it's a pretty common saying.
 

Bipolarcy

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My mom went to UNI with a girl who she was roommates with in the 80s who had indoor plumbing for the first time in her dorm. Roommate grew up somewhere deep off the grid in iowa and was one of like a dozen siblings
This reminds me of a guy in college, who wore farmer's pants (the ones with the hammer loop on them) every day, because ... well ... he was a farmer and he was as green as a copper penny (there's another saying). His roommate was just the opposite and was sort of a lady's man and had hung up centerfolds all over their room. The farmer would get dressed in the closet because he said the centerfolds were looking at him. "Their eyes follow you all around the room," he said as his excuse for not wanting to get naked in front of them.
 

Ms3r4ISU

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My mom always said "Straining gnats and swallowing camels" referring to someone sweating the small stuff while ignoring the bigger problems.

She also used to say, "they can kill me but they can't eat me," which to me meant don't pay attention to mean things people say.

Another one she used to say after a meal was, "I've had a great sufficiency. Anymore would be an excess superfluousness."

"I'm hungrier than boar shoat in a cob pile," is one I've heard all my life.

Ironically, I used to work with a millennial, who always accused me of making stuff up whenever I used one of these sayings, and I've used just about every one listed in this thread at some time or another. I told the whippersnapper that there's an invention called Google and if you think I made it up, put down your video game for a second, look it up on there and it will show you that it's a pretty common saying.
Was going to ask you the definition of a whippersnapper, and thought better of it. https://grammarist.com/usage/whippersnapper/
 

BCClone

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Not exactly sure.
This reminds me of a guy in college, who wore farmer's pants (the ones with the hammer loop on them) every day, because ... well ... he was a farmer and he was as green as a copper penny (there's another saying). His roommate was just the opposite and was sort of a lady's man and had hung up centerfolds all over their room. The farmer would get dressed in the closet because he said the centerfolds were looking at him. "Their eyes follow you all around the room," he said as his excuse for not wanting to get naked in front of them.
They actually are called carpenter pants.
 

t-noah

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If you can't be good, be lucky. Or I guess, ... If you can't be lucky, be good.
If you can't be on time, be early.
A day late and a dollar short (too little, too late).
 

JM4CY

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Hotter than two mice humpin’ in a wool sock out there.
 

t-noah

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What do ya want, a medal or chest to put it on?

Don't get yer undies in a wad.
 

Ms3r4ISU

Me: Mea culpa. Also me: Sine cura sis.
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Another one from long ago when I was a kid: My dad would say “skin a rabbit!” when he helped my little brother pull his shirt up over his head to take it off.
 
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cyatheart

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If you work at John Deere people say

"I work at Deeres"

Not John Deere, not Deere, it's Deers
 

kirk89gt

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You can wish in one hand and sh!t in the other and see which hand gets filled first.
 

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