I'm not sure what that gesture means, but if someone was to do that to me, I'd think "They want to hump my leg?" :floorlaugh: :floorlaugh: :floorlaugh:
One of our sayings was "Son of a biscuit eater"
Can't really claim this one as purely southern because I've just recently heard "other folks" use it, but:
You're a hoot!: "You are belly-wobblin', knee-slappin', nose-snortin', drink-spewin', britches-wettin' funny as all get-out." OR "Man! You beat all I've ever seen!"
:floorlaugh::floorlaugh::floorlaugh: Breathe :floorlaugh::floorlaugh::floorlaugh:
That is intend a hoot!!! And hy-larious to-boot! :floorlaugh::floorlaugh::floorlaugh:
And pferrin, we have "aigs" around here too!!! lol
snip
First place - only place, maybe - I heard it was in one of my favorite movies: "Local Hero," with Peter Riegert and Burt Lancaster. I adopted it forthwith and it's been in my vocabulary ever since, waiting for the occasion to justify it. I have no idea what it literally means; perhaps nothing. It's sense is all in the sound it makes maybe, and the impossibility of the act involved. But its usage is definitely in the context of "not pleased"!
Instead of "go ahead" we say "gord head"
Bolognie, aigs, taters, maters, naners(bananas)
Mom always said Hiwayah(Hawaii)
Yes! Sort of a "pissing in the wind" thing. But with rope.Well, when you think of it visually and literally, "pissing up a rope" is an act in vain because gravity brings it back down.
Therefore, I think the expression denotes a useless, futile, nonsensical act.
moo
I was riding with a southern coworker one day and we passed and we passed a young woman jogging on the sidewalk. His statement was " it looks like 2 bulldogs fighting in her drawers.
Years later it might look like 2 bulldogs fighting in my drawers from behind. Lol
Also one that I heard on occasion was that someone was lower than whale poppie
Oh, no, pissing in the wind would have much more dire consequences than pissing up a rope. 'Cause the wind would maybe blow that wetness back all over you. Whereas, depending on what the rope is made of, it could possibly absorb the wetness. Seriously.
And speaking of the wind, how about "three sheets to the wind" for being inebriated? The origin of that one I do know. The "sheets" are the sails on a sailboat. With three sheets up in a wind, the boat would be at an angle to the water. Leaning over, so to speak. As a drunk person might do.
And in England, "being pissed" = "being drunk"
Last but surely not least, in the history of medicine there were once (long, long, long ago) "Pisse Prophets". They were medicine men who gathered the urine of a patient, took it outside and dumped it on the ground. Then they waited to see if any ants came to it. If the ants gathered, the patient was indeed sick. (Diabetes mellitus is what it is called today. Glucose accumulates in the urine.)
being drunk equals being ***** faced here
also toasted, or schnockered
Oh, no, pissing in the wind would have much more dire consequences than pissing up a rope. 'Cause the wind would maybe blow that wetness back all over you. Whereas, depending on what the rope is made of, it could possibly absorb the wetness. Seriously.
And speaking of the wind, how about "three sheets to the wind" for being inebriated? The origin of that one I do know. The "sheets" are the sails on a sailboat. With three sheets up in a wind, the boat would be at an angle to the water. Leaning over, so to speak. As a drunk person might do.
And in England, "being pissed" = "being drunk"
Last but surely not least, in the history of medicine there were once (long, long, long ago) "Pisse Prophets". They were medicine men who gathered the urine of a patient, took it outside and dumped it on the ground. Then they waited to see if any ants came to it. If the ants gathered, the patient was indeed sick. (Diabetes mellitus is what it is called today. Glucose accumulates in the urine.)