You sure it was "like a ten-day clock"?
I've heard of people having a face that could stop a clock, or an 8-day-clock, so I suppose a really ugly person could have a face that could stop a ten-day-clock.
My dad recalled Dizzy, narrating a baseball game that was close to being rained out - "He just slud into second base."
John
So I guess no one knows this old phrase any more, either.
"I don't know him from Adam's off ox."
The "creek" wasn't water; it was a tribe of indians, and they could spoil your day when you had other plans.
John
For us country people it was water. There were not any bridges and when the water rose in the creek you couldn't drive through it so you couldn't go do what you had planned. Larry
That would be 'wet behind the ears' meaning new and inexperienced.Can anyone help? I'm unsure of that expression that refers to a person being, I believe, cheeky. Is it:
DRY behind the ears OR WET behind the ears?
If I've given an incorrect meaning, please correct me.
thanks,
Kaaskop49
Shield #5103
And how bout fin.....? $5 bucks is a fin. $10 is a double fin.
But if thou chose not to speaketh the words....I'm good...