Dialect part 2

Apr 03, 2008 22:05

When someone was restless and dithering, going constantly in and out of a room, my Mum (born and brought up in Derby) and her Mum (born and brought up Alsager, Cheshire, but with parents both from Rugby, Warwickshire) would say, "They were in and out like a cat at a fair." I've never heard this anywhere else, and Google doesn't help. Anyone else ( Read more... )

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steepholm April 3 2008, 21:30:43 UTC
I don't know that one, but I had a gf whose Black Country mother rebuked fidgeters with "Stop otching!" I've not come across "otch" elsewhere, before or since.

Actually, your expression reminds me of a line from The Dukes of Hazzard, though possibly not original to it: "Busier than a long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs."

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phoebesmum April 3 2008, 21:40:18 UTC
My mother said 'dog at a fair'.

A friend of mine insists on saying 'in and out like a yo-yo', which drives me nuts.

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ladyofastolat April 3 2008, 21:51:35 UTC
Ooh. "Dog at a fair" at least gets a couple of Google hits, one of which claims a 16th century citation of the phrase: here

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phoebesmum April 3 2008, 21:57:33 UTC
Dog makes more sense. Cats would regard fairgrounds with disdain.

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ladyofastolat April 3 2008, 22:05:34 UTC
No! Dogs would say "ooh! Fairground! Master! Food!" and would just hot-foot it to the fair and stay there. Cats would say, "Ooh! Possibility of food. No. Need to look independent and aloof. But possibility of food! No, independence. And sleep! Can sleep outside fair, where it's quiet. But possibility of food! Goldfish at fairground stalls! Fish! But possibility of sleep outside fair. Or possibility of sleeping on cuddly toy prizes. No. Better sleep outside. No. Chance of fish inside." Hence the "in and out" stuff. ;-)

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alitalf April 4 2008, 08:40:46 UTC
My mum always used "dog at a fair&quoy; FWIW.

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bunn April 4 2008, 12:02:46 UTC
No, but I have heard reference to 'up and down like a sailor's trousers'. I am not sure if the sailor in question is randy, or simply has been eating too much foreign food.

In a not very related vein, my father used to refer to seagulls as Shytehawks...

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