KILO NOVEMBER
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,068
- Location
- Hurricane Coast Florida
My grandmother always referred to her couch as "The Davenport" of course at one time it really was a Davenport.
Ditto for my father's mother.
My grandmother always referred to her couch as "The Davenport" of course at one time it really was a Davenport.
"When was the last time you were doing anything "in high cotton"? I used to hear that all the time...not so much anymore."
My dad said that a lot, and he picked cotton when he was a boy in Alabama.
However, and this is for mature audiences only, his complete phrase was that someone was "Sh--ting in high cotton", which meant not so much that someone was prospering, but that their situation was a good one, and in the direct meaning of the phrase that they were conducting their business "in high cotton" where they had a bit of privacy. Another similar meaning is that someone "had it made" if they were doing that in high cotton.
Another colorful Southernism... (and my dad was a colorful southerner)
Not sure that is an exclusivly Southern phrase.
As for the other phrase, the one referring to a masonry privy, that one has always been universal.
"When was the last time you were doing anything "in high cotton"? I used to hear that all the time...not so much anymore."
My dad said that a lot, and he picked cotton when he was a boy in Alabama.
However, and this is for mature audiences only, his complete phrase was that someone was "Sh--ting in high cotton", which meant not so much that someone was prospering, but that their situation was a good one, and in the direct meaning of the phrase that they were conducting their business "in high cotton" where they had a bit of privacy. Another similar meaning is that someone "had it made" if they were doing that in high cotton.
Another colorful Southernism... (and my dad was a colorful southerner)
It was popularized in the North by baseball broadcaster Red Barber. When the Dodgers had three men on base and nobody out and Camilli coming to bat, they were said to be "walkin' in tall cotton."
As for the other phrase, the one referring to a masonry privy, that one has always been universal.
That's how I typically heard the phrase as well, but never in reference to privacy. "Doing your business in high cotton" simply meant you were doing well for yourself.
Old Biddy, Fishwife, Crone, Termagent, Shrew, Hussy, Coquette, Jezebel, Doxy, Hoochie, Minx, Quean, Trollope, Trull.
Similarly, except in a more positive way, the word "Toots" as a *term of endearment one might use in the same way as "Babe", "Honey", or "Dear". I use it to get my wife's attention, and have for many years, but I don't know anyone else who does.Old Biddy, Fishwife, Crone, Termagent, Shrew, Hussy, Coquette, Jezebel, Doxy, Hoochie, Minx, Quean, Trollope, Trull...
Old Biddy, Fishwife, Crone, Termagent, Shrew, Hussy, Coquette, Jezebel, Doxy, Hoochie, Minx, Quean, Trollope, Trull...
Similarly, except in a more positive way, the word "Toots" as a *term of endearment one might use in the same way as "Babe", "Honey", or "Dear".
Don't forget chippy and strumpet.I've also heard one which isn't mentioned here: Harlot.
I think that could be said of any term of endearment; it's all about context and inflection....In Brit speak, the term "Dear," can be both patronising and endearing. It depends how it's said...
I've heard Jezebel, but at the time, I didn't know what it meant! I've also heard Doxy, and Minx.
Kids today probably wouldn't know what you meant by the phrase "hang up the phone".
With automatic windows being the standard norm in cars for decades now, do people still say "roll down the window?" What else would you say - put the window down? Buzz down the window? Open the window? Or do they still say roll down the window without knowing you used to have to literally roll down the window?