HudsonHawk
I'll Lock Up
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What the heck is "high cotton"? I've never heard that one!
Being in "high cotton" means one is being successful or prosperous.
What the heck is "high cotton"? I've never heard that one!
In the US, a person involved in taking illegal bets is called a "bookie" or "book maker", because he notes the wagers his customers place in his notebook. So, placing a bet is "making book". Another way of saying the same thing is "you can bet on it" with the unstated assumption is that the wager is sure to pay off.
Being in "high cotton" means one is being successful or prosperous.
As the grandson (read - cheap labor) of a cotton farmer I was never really a fan of the "high cotton", although when I got big enough to help pick the watermelons I sure missed it.
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In some old radio shows, I heard them referred to as "numbers rackets".
That brings up another term - prior to government lotteries, local bookies ran "numbers games" which were local lotteries where people bet on a number which was usually the last three numbers of the attendance at a local race track (as the number was normally in the tens of thousands, the last three digits were random, unknowable in advance and transparent). "Running a numbers game," "the numbers," etc. were regular expressions that pop up occasional in old movies (usually, for obvious reasons, noir films).
Picking watermelons sucks almost as bad as picking strawberries. My grandmother used to make me do the latter. Apparently it built character.
You're right - I forgot that version 'till you said it. Just like the lottery it was a part of everyday life and, like the lottery, it was the lower economic groups that play the most. When I see all the happy slappy lottery signs and advertisements today, I always think to myself that if the government didn't profit from it, the government would be railing against it as it hurts so many people struggling financially.
Another lost term is the word "Mountebank", which was, I believe last used as a perjorative on November 12, 1999.
Since then the term appears to have been replaced in some circles by the term "Job Creator".
Character ............yeeaahhh....that's it............character
"Talk turkey" or "Palaver" = verbally negotiate business/barter
"Where did you get that hat?" from a comic song popular in English music halls 100 years ago.Sofa, couch, davenport, how about divan? According to the dictionary a divan has no back or arms but in our house it meant the same as sofa.
Also
"...Where did you get that hat, where did you get that tile? Isn't it a nobby one and just the proper style! I should like to have one just the same as that. Whereever I go they'd shout "hello, where did you get that hat?..."
Is this a song? I reminds me of a advertising jingle from the 1950's for a local haberdasher.
"Where did you get that hat?
Oh, you lucky fellow.
Levinsons, Levinsons, Levinsons, Levinsons,
Yes Sir!"
Haberdasher. Now that's another word you don't anymore either.