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expressions

27 replies

mmm · 18/06/2003 12:47

' behind like a school girl, face like a museum ' ( from Italy )

'Little children , little problems...' ( Italy )
'When they're little you could eat them up. When they're bigger, you wish you had' (Spain)
Has anybody got anymore ?

OP posts:
addle · 18/06/2003 12:53

'It's a good life - if you don't weaken' UK/grandparents' generation

suzyj · 18/06/2003 12:57

more of a mess than a mad woman's knitting
up and down like a bride's nightie
face like a slapped arse
face like a bulldog that's eaten a bee

The last two are phrases from a lady who used to baby-sit me when I was little. Didn't really understand them and got told off when I repeated them, but I thought she was great!

oliveoil · 18/06/2003 12:59

sleeps like a baby.......

suzyj · 18/06/2003 13:03

Ha ha, good one!

bunny2 · 18/06/2003 14:31

'Pig in knickers' is my favourite.

beetroot · 18/06/2003 14:34

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Message withdrawn

Bossanova · 18/06/2003 15:41

Happy as Larry - who the f* is Larry?!

suedonim · 18/06/2003 15:42

"I'm so hungry I could eat a scabby horse between two mattresses."

"I haven't laughed so much since granny caught her tits in the mangle." Both RN sayings from DH.

"To buy a wigwam for a horse's bridle" - my grandpa's answer to my asking him where he was going.

"As old as my tongue and six months older than my teeth" - Grandpa's answer to questions about his age.

Dahlia · 18/06/2003 15:50

Shit happens.

pie · 18/06/2003 15:55

"I haven't laughed so much since granny caught her tits in the mangle."

Ask your DH if this should actually be:

"Laugh, I nearly shat, I had not laughed so hard since Auntie Mabel caught her left tit in the mangle."

Ask him puurrrrlllleeeasse.

suedonim · 18/06/2003 16:25

Pie, he says he's heard lots of variations along those lines but none of them scan as well as the 'granny' version.

HZL · 18/06/2003 16:38

Variations on some others mentioned here:

"Face like a bulldog chewing a wasp"

"So hungry I could eat a horse between two breadvans" - a favourite of my mum's

I like:

"I love kids, but I couldn't eat a whole one"

Aimed at my brother, whose legs are on the skinny side: "Last time I saw legs like that, they were hanging out of a nest"

Gini · 18/06/2003 16:41

heres one:

Face like a bulldog licking p**s off of a stinging nettle..

mmmmm

pie · 18/06/2003 17:32

Fair enough sue, I just wondered if he was a Derek and Clive fan as they started the whole tit in mangle laughing thing off.

SamboM · 18/06/2003 20:20

"Face like a smacked arse" is a fave of mine!

suedonim · 19/06/2003 05:27

Derek & Clive?? Never heard of them! Who are they?

batey · 19/06/2003 06:38

"A mouth like Ghandis left flip flop"-when you wake after drinking too much!!!

Not that anyone here would know how that feels surely!

mmm · 19/06/2003 07:08

Suedonim, Derek and Clive were really Peter Cook and Dudley Moore. They brought out a 'rude' LP (if you're asking what an 'lp' is, you must be very young !)

it's about as much use as an ashtray on a motorbike. (or a chocolate fireguard)
My p's granny used to say 'shit with sugar on' when he asked her what was for tea.

OP posts:
whymummy · 19/06/2003 07:42

mmm my mum used to say "shit with chips" and we use to go "oh no,no with chips!"
she also says
"there`s always a pot for a shit"when someone horrible gets a boyfriend/girlfriend

fio2 · 19/06/2003 08:06

muck for luck

Rhubarb · 19/06/2003 15:01

ESAD which is a horrible insult that only myself and 3 others know from college.

suedonim · 19/06/2003 15:11

Aha, I understand now, Mmm. I suspect Pete'n' Dud got it from the Royal Navy rather than the other way round - all that salty sailor talk etc. As for my age -I'm ancient, with two boys in their 20's as well as two dd's of 16 and 7.

A saying about a nosy person. 'She likes to know the ins and outs of a cat's *rse.'

There are others but I don't think I can put them on a family website like this!!

trueserafina · 19/06/2003 15:47

Irish one: "Ah sure enjoy yourself. You'll be a long time dead". Jolly lot, aren't we?!!!

Bron · 19/06/2003 16:43

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Furball · 19/06/2003 20:47

'I'll go to the foot of our stairs' - whats all that about?