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So through with COOL!

Talbot

One Too Many
Messages
1,855
Location
Melbourne Australia
This is probably an Aussie thing....

When I was a lot younger, before cool we had 'grouse'.

'Those shoes look grouse!'

'We're having a grouse time!'

I have no idea where it came from. Its probably a pretty bogan thing to say these days, but its ok if you are drinking woodstock bourbon and cola pre mix.
 

MrNewportCustom

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,265
Location
Outer Los Angeles
Marc Chevalier said:
In the military, we'd say "outstanding" all the time. It effectively replaced the word "cool.".

After many years, I recently had a perfect storm of an opportunity to use outstanding in a manner I remember a high school algebra teacher once using it; I had to tell a certain annoying, otiose cockalorum (you can look those words up when you get home) that he was "about to be outstanding . . . out standing in the hall."

I've recently begun a personal crusade to eliminate the use of so as an intensifier in my own speech - according to Strunk and White, it is not an intensifier. I know it's been in such usage for generations, but it's so valley-girlish when used that way. I mean, it's totally valley-girlish. :rolleyes:


I'm so outta here,
Lee

;)
 

Chas

One Too Many
Messages
1,715
Location
Melbourne, Australia
"Ah, kiss my royal American!"

"Go soak yer head!"

"Go jump in the lake!" Funny how a lot of "get lost"-type orders were water-related.


I'm done with the word 'cool', as well. Unless we are taking about cool jazz. But I'd rather not.

It's not enough to kill a word. It has to be replaced.

I nominate "Swell". Alternatively, "Swellegant" is nice.
 

Benny Holiday

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,805
Location
Sydney Australia
Talbot said:
When I was a lot younger, before cool we had 'grouse'.

'Those shoes look grouse!'

'We're having a grouse time!'

I have no idea where it came from. Its probably a pretty bogan thing to say these days, but its ok if you are drinking woodstock bourbon and cola pre mix.

It's an older Aussie slang word, not much heard in Sydney but I notice it used quite a bit by friends in Melbourne, even those in their early thirties.
 

Fletch

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,865
Location
Iowa - The Land That Stuff Forgot
"If this is _______, I'll take vanilla!" A 1920s-30s expression of disdain or rejection of an idea or thing.

"Horsefeathers!" "Applesauce!" "Eyewash!" "Banana oil!" Expressions of disbelief.

You know Horsefeathers was a movie, but there were two movies called I'll Take Vanilla, as well as a comic strip and pop song called Banana Oil.

3312707526_bfe5fefec0_o.jpg

I've had this happen many times.

The chemical compound isoamyl acetate is known as banana oil. But it isn't made from bananas - it just smells like 'em.
 

reetpleat

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,681
Location
Seattle
Marc Chevalier said:
"Dizzy dame."

"Fairy."

"Yer grandma sucks eggs!" "Go suck an egg!"

"That an' yer mother!"

"Take a long walk off a short pier!"

"The old broad!" "The old battle axe!"

"Yeah, sure."

.


"Aaaaahhh, sode's your old man"
 

reetpleat

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,681
Location
Seattle
Marc Chevalier said:
The word "Foxy!" is missing too. :(

.

foxy seems to be making a comeback, but perhaps only amongst hipsters trying to revive the seventies in an ironic tongue in cheek way.

However, it generally is not used for good in general, just a good looking person.

On the other hand, both a person, or a thing or idea can be "hot"
 

Idledame

Practically Family
Messages
897
Location
Lomita (little hill) California
The expression bitchin' was big when I was in Junior High, and the first time I used it at home my parents were ready to punish me for using it. Luckily my older brother who was in High School explained to them that it was not cussing but a common slang word. Older brothers can be cool!
 

pigeon toe

One Too Many
Messages
1,328
Location
los angeles, ca
Benny Holiday said:
It's an older Aussie slang word, not much heard in Sydney but I notice it used quite a bit by friends in Melbourne, even those in their early thirties.

An Aussie girl I knew last year used it! She's only 21 or 22. None of us Americans ever knew what the heck she was talking about when she would say 'grouse' and the accent only made it more confusing!
 

HarpPlayerGene

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,682
Location
North Central Florida
OK, I tried to read through all the posts (it was fun but I also started gettin' a headache lol ) to see if anyone already came up with this angle:

All of these words came from someone originally.

Don't like 'cool', come up with a new one. Something as utterly ridiculous as many we've shared here, and use it a lot, and see if it catches on!

"Hey man, that dude's roach."

or

"Did you hear that new song, it's really shine"

or.... your turn - I dare you.

:D
 

MrNewportCustom

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,265
Location
Outer Los Angeles
A buddy in high school introduced a new word of his own when he signed my yearbook. Lo, these many decades later, I still remember it: Zambreck.


Lee

For some reason, it didn't catch on. [huh]
 

Forgotten Man

One Too Many
Messages
1,944
Location
City Dump 32 E. River Sutton Place.
Man, I've got to say, I had no idea this topic would take off like this... just like my dear Miss 1940s put it: It's bigger then Uranium! lol

I'm feelin' better now that I've stopped the usage of "Cool"... I just say swell, or neat! Depends on the context of course. The other day a supervisor asked me to do something, I replied that it would be a "push over" and she asked: What do you mean by that? I said it would be a led pipe synch! She then asked: I don't understand, then I said: Ok, it would be EASY! HAHAHAHAHA!

I've been watching lots of old 30s movies so, I'm really, really trying hard to work those old terms into my daily vocabulary so it would come natural and easy. No room for cool, dude or any other pathetic modern day terms in my mission to develop a colorful and entertaining depression era language. It really is like learning a new language!
 

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