on
25-09-2013
6:05 PM
- last edited on
26-09-2013
9:28 AM
by
kh-daniel
25-09-2013 6:17 PM
25-09-2013 8:31 PM
on
25-09-2013
10:01 PM
- last edited on
26-09-2013
11:00 AM
by
kh-daniel
25-09-2013 10:41 PM
Can't be ar*ed - now where did THAT phraseology stem from?
26-09-2013 3:45 AM
Tomatoes causing death from lead leached for pewter.
Probably not, not much lead in pewter, a heck of a lot of tomatoes would have to be eaten for any amount of lead to also be consumed and they were considered poisonous for other reasons.
Saved by the bell is a term coming from the boxing ring.
Dead ringer is from horse racing and the graveyard shift or watch is a seagoing term.
26-09-2013 1:36 PM
Probably not mate.
The original post, has been "moderated" as you can see.
This thread was started "tongue in cheek" for a laugh. Nothing more.
26-09-2013 6:01 PM
so funny i almost fell asleep
26-09-2013 7:40 PM
Really....
26-09-2013 8:03 PM
Well, even though some of it wasn't quite factually correct, it was still fun reading how people have arrived at some of the meanings.
26-09-2013 10:19 PM
Thanx aemethril xx
26-09-2013 11:42 PM
http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/saved-by-the-bell.html
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/gruesome-origins-everyday-phrases-saved-2154388
27-09-2013 2:40 AM
@bankhaunter wrote:Tomatoes causing death from lead leached for pewter.
Probably not, not much lead in pewter, a heck of a lot of tomatoes would have to be eaten for any amount of lead to also be consumed and they were considered poisonous for other reasons.
Saved by the bell is a term coming from the boxing ring.
Dead ringer is from horse racing and the graveyard shift or watch is a seagoing term.
Hi.. Bankhaunter.
By courtesy of Charliebird...
http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/saved-by-the-bell.html
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/gruesome-origins-everyday-phrases-saved-2154388
27-09-2013 9:16 PM
Actually I quite like the idea of the bells in coffins, it's a pity sometimes that the true explanations are less fun, you would want to hear the person who said they were really 'saved by the bell'.
The graveyard shift would be the old chap in his watchman's hut, warming his hands at the brazier, spade at the ready, listening out and no doubt occassionly led astray by medical students creeping around in the dark, their little bells at the ready.
28-09-2013 2:29 PM
This was boxing slang that came into being in the latter half of the 19th century. A boxer who is in danger of losing a bout can be 'saved' from defeat by the bell that marks the end of a round.
But.....
There is a widespread notion that the phrase is from the 17th century and that it describes people being saved from being buried alive by using a coffin with a bell attached. The idea being that, if they were buried but later revived, they could ring the bell and be saved from an unpleasant death. The idea is certainly plausible as the fear of burial alive was and is real. Several prominent people expressed this fear when close to death themselves.
28-09-2013 4:03 PM
@ronnybabes wrote:This was boxing slang that came into being in the latter half of the 19th century. A boxer who is in danger of losing a bout can be 'saved' from defeat by the bell that marks the end of a round.
But.....
There is a widespread notion that the phrase is from the 17th century and that it describes people being saved from being buried alive by using a coffin with a bell attached. The idea being that, if they were buried but later revived, they could ring the bell and be saved from an unpleasant death. The idea is certainly plausible as the fear of burial alive was and is real. Several prominent people expressed this fear when close to death themselves.
Now they bury you with a mobile phone...so you can ring someone if your not dead..