T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
420.1 | How long ? | RDGE00::BOOTH | Life, don't talk to me about life ... | Thu Oct 08 1987 05:59 | 11 |
|
In answer to the question, 'how long ?' :
men talk in inches
women talk in minutes
True ?
|
420.2 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Miracle and Magic! | Thu Oct 08 1987 07:53 | 3 |
| What counts is not how long you make it, but how you make it long.
--- jerry
|
420.3 | sorry, I can't help adding my $.02 worth | LEZAH::BOBBITT | face piles of trials with smiles | Thu Oct 08 1987 11:55 | 6 |
| courtesy of Mae West:
a hard man is good to find
-Jody
|
420.4 | if you must, then ... | ERASER::KALLIS | Make Hallowe'en a National holiday. | Thu Oct 08 1987 12:13 | 6 |
| Re .3:
Or the old saying:
The sultan had eight wives;
seven of them had it pretty soft.
|
420.5 | How long, indeed! | HOMSIC::DUDEK | Elegant in her simplicity | Thu Oct 08 1987 14:08 | 3 |
| (Pardon me)
It's not the size of the ship; it's the motion of the ocean.
|
420.6 | whatever happened to just plain 'lovers'? | COOKIE::ZANE | Trithemius | Fri Oct 09 1987 14:13 | 16 |
|
Why is it that these phrases imply a sexual relationship?
She's my girlfriend. Or, he's my boyfriend. Does this imply the existence
of one or the hoped for establishment of one?
significant other
living together
They've been seeing each other a lot lately.
others?
|
420.7 | It's in the ear of the belistener | PSTJTT::TABER | Out of sight, out of range. | Fri Oct 09 1987 14:39 | 13 |
| Other than "living together" I don't find any of those imply a sexual
relationship. The reason "living together" does is two-fold; it's a
shortening of "living together in sin" which was the way it was
expressed in the sixties with mock horror. The other is that I'm
supposing a hidden assumption on your part that the phrase is being
applied to a man and woman who are unrelated.
If I heard that someone and their mother were "living together" I
wouldn't assume a sexual connotation. Nor would I if someone said "John
and Bob are living together" unless I knew that their sexual orientation
would make a sexual situation likely.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
420.8 | whatever... | ERASER::KALLIS | Make Hallowe'en a National holiday. | Fri Oct 09 1987 15:58 | 13 |
| Re .7:
"Living together in sin" is far older than the 1960s. _I_ heard
it in the 1940s (though as a very young child, I didn't know what it
meant).
"Sleeping together," which is somewhat archaic, meant sex and nothing
else. However, once when I was a teen, a very obnoxious and overweight
guy caused some of my associates to create the following graffito:
"<name of guy> sleeps together."
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
420.9 | One Word Too Many | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | Digital Internal Use Only | Fri Oct 09 1987 18:42 | 5 |
| I remember it as "living in sin" as in "they are living in sin". Living
together was/is entirely different.
But as this conference would suggest, it only takes one word to change the
whole world :-)
|
420.10 | Boffle, snik... | MARRHQ::MALLONEE | | Fri Oct 30 1987 10:10 | 10 |
| I remember when, as a teenager, I would go outside on a bright,
sunny saturday to polish the fire-engine red finish on my Johnson Bicycle
Company ten-speed. Only now, armed with a mature understanding
of the world's ways, do I understand the reason behind the derisive
chuckles I would receive when asked what I did all weekend, I'd reply;
"Wax my Johnson..."
howzat?
rgdz,
|
420.11 | Mae West again. | MLNOIS::HARBIG | | Mon Nov 02 1987 04:14 | 9 |
|
From an old Mae West movie
Lecherous suitor: "I want you in the worst possible way."
Mae:"The worst possible way I know is standing up in
a hammock!"
Max
|
420.12 | In the sewer ... | RTOISB::ARMSSUP | Rdge00::Booth by another name | Thu Nov 05 1987 04:45 | 17 |
|
Anyone know where the phrases 'Get your oats' or 'Spreading wild
oats' came from ?
There are lots of euphanisms but most are a little more obvious.
'Getting laid' or 'Getting one's leg over' are common (in more ways
than one :-) and obvious, some others are crude but may be thought
of as amusing, like 'giving a meat injection'. (I know it's sexist,
but *I* wouldn't use a phrase like that :-)
Reminds me of the saying :
"All's fair in lust and whore ..."
Go on, drag your mind back down into the sewer and see what comes
up ...
|
420.13 | As in Sheath and Knife | WELSWS::MANNION | Bonnets so red | Thu Nov 05 1987 07:35 | 5 |
| A guid Scots phrase often used in traditional ballads and songs
is to "gang tae the broom", maybe whilst in the broom the lovers
would spread a few wild oat seeds about?
Phillip
|
420.14 | Mark Twain | GLIVET::RECKARD | Jon Reckard 264-7710 | Thu Nov 05 1987 07:40 | 2 |
| Mark Twain (in _Letters from the Earth_?) uses a candle/candlestick
analogy that I thought was remarkably frank for the 19-aught era.
|
420.15 | The bonny broom | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Men's sauna in corporation baths | Thu Nov 05 1987 07:41 | 5 |
| re: .-1
Aha. So in the Child(e?) Ballad _Cruel_Sister_, the refrain -
`Lay the bent to the bonny broom' -
is all about, you know, thing.
|
420.16 | innuendo, indeed | LEZAH::BOBBITT | sprinkled with syntactic sugar | Thu Nov 05 1987 09:35 | 21 |
| ooh, ooh, joke time...
my father is a punner of the worst degree, and he told me this -
so blame him, okay?
Three french gentlemen were reeling home after a night of too much
drinking, and then staggered into the "red light district" where
the "ladies of the evening" tend to gather.
They approached a group of three painted ladies and one grinned
drunkenly and exclaimed, "Why look, mes amis, a fanfare of strumpets!"
To which the second corrected, "No, it is a jam of tarts..."
But the third smiled softly and said, "Mais non, it is, as they
say, an anthology of pro's..."
|
420.17 | Savoire-faire | GRNDAD::STONE | Roy | Thu Nov 05 1987 13:10 | 16 |
| .16 reminds me of another...
Three learned gentlemen, one American, one English and one French,
were debating the nuances to the term _savoire-faire_. The American
suggested the scenario of a husband arriving home unexpectedly and
discovering his wife in the process of making love with another man.
An example of _savoire-faire_ would be if the husband merely said,
"Pardon me." and closed the door.
The Englishman did not quite agree. To him, a better example of
_savoire-faire_ would be if the husband had said, "Pardon me...proceed!"
The Frenchman quickly pointed out that neither of the other two had
the right idea. Using the same scenario, with the husband having said,
"Pardon me...proceed!" and if the other gentleman DID proceed, _that_
would be _savoire-faire_!
|
420.18 | and then, there's | ERASER::KALLIS | Make Hallowe'en a National holiday. | Thu Nov 05 1987 14:37 | 23 |
| Re .last_few:
Ah, are we getting anecdotal then?
I cannot resist a military one:
A general and a colonekl were having an argument about sex. The
general maintained that sex was 50% work and 50% fun; the colonel
maintained that sex was 40% work and 60% fun. Their argument raged
for some time; yet nobody gave an inch. Then, the general spied
a corporal working nearby and called him over.
The general said, "Soldier, we're having an argument. One of us
says that sex is 60% fun and 40% work; the other says that sex is
equally work and fun. Who's right?"
The corporal said, "Neither, sir. Sex is 100% fun with no work."
The colonel asked, "How do you come to that conclusion?"
And the corporal said, "Sir, if there was any work involved, you'd
have the enlisted men do it for you."
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
420.19 | two more, pardon my french | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | sprinkled with syntactic sugar | Thu Nov 05 1987 15:51 | 29 |
| 3 french children are standing at their parents' bedroom door.
They wish to go to the movies, but need money for their tickets.
Since the door is closed, they assume the parents do not want to
be disturbed. Nonetheless they are curious, so the 7 year old looks
through the keyhole and says, "Maman and Papa are in bed under the
covers together". The 9 year old then takes a peek, and says, "I
think they are making love." The 12 year old then looks for himself,
and quips, "Yes, but they are doing it so badly..."
A young boy named Pierre is being taken by his Maman to the zoo.
There they admire all the animals, until they come to the elephant.
The boy, being curious, asks, "Maman, what is that on the elephant?"
Maman replies, "Oh, you mean ze trunk?". "No," the child says,
"at the other end". "Oh, you mean ze tail?". "No, in front of
zat, between ze legs?" At this point, maman is rather flustered,
and she hurriedly replies, blushing furiously, "Ah, it
is....nothing...you can ask papa about it later...let's go see ze
lion."
Later, they return home, and Pierre cries out, "Papa, papa,
we went to ze zoo and it was wonderful, but zere is something I
need to know." Papa replies, "And what is that?" "Well I wanted
to know what something was on ze elephant." "Oh, you mean ze trunk?"
"No, at ze other end." "Oh, you mean ze tail." "No, in front
of zat, between ze legs, maman said it was nothing." At this Papa
smiled..."Ah, Pierre, zat is because she is spoiled."
|
420.20 | As long as we're on animal stories. | GRNDAD::STONE | Roy | Fri Nov 06 1987 17:09 | 4 |
| Then there's the story of the monkey who married the elephant...
His friends put him up to it!
|
420.21 | | LDP::BUSCH | | Mon Nov 09 1987 12:25 | 12 |
| -< As long as we're on animal stories. >-
< Then there's the story of the monkey who married the elephant...
< His friends put him up to it!
That sounds like the one about the flea climbing up the elephants leg with
intention to rape.
Which reminds me about the same flea floating down the river on his back,
yelling out "Raise the drawbridge".
|
420.22 | Now, now ... | RDGE00::BOOTH | Life, don't talk to me about life ... | Mon Nov 09 1987 13:51 | 3 |
|
Ahem !!! We seem to have drifted off the point :-)
|
420.23 | actually, you're right | INK::KALLIS | Remember how ephemeral is Earth. | Mon Nov 09 1987 16:04 | 7 |
| re .22:
> ... We seem to have drifted off the point :-)
Good. Then we can lower that damned bridge! :-D
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
420.24 | FFWWWPT! | MARRHQ::MALLONEE | | Mon Nov 09 1987 18:53 | 3 |
| Everyone telling jokes needs to be placed on a five day regimen
of foaming beef enemas. Or to be in receipt of a traumatic rectal
ham lancing, one.
|
420.25 | Just a letch | DECWET::MITCHELL | CRTs: Live long and phosphor! | Mon Nov 09 1987 19:31 | 5 |
| But I want MORE! I liked "zay are doing it so badly" and the one
about the flea.
John M.
|
420.26 | There's a Jokes file if you want Jokes ... | RDGE00::BOOTH | Ah, but I was older then ... | Tue Nov 10 1987 06:49 | 4 |
|
So why don't you get into the Jokes note file then ?
I'm still looking for answers to my original question ...
|
420.27 | OK, back to the original question, then | TLE::SAVAGE | Neil, @Spit Brook | Tue Nov 10 1987 09:30 | 11 |
| Re: 0.
> But tell me why when two people talking about sleeping together,
> 'sleeping' has got nothing to do with it ?
I claim that sleeping does have something to do with doing 'it.'
Humans habitually do 'it' just before retiring. A common after-effect
of doing 'it' is a pleasant relaxed feeling that easily brings on
sleep. My wife and I often refer to 'it' as 'nature's tranquilizer.'
You could just as easily say, "nature's sleeping pill."
|
420.28 | Why don't we do "it" in the road? | HOMSIC::DUDEK | Call me Dr. Brevity | Tue Nov 10 1987 13:51 | 7 |
| I think "it" is referred as "sleeping together" because the most
common location for doing "it" is the same location for sleeping
(bed). (Incidentally, this is just a theory. I don't have any
data to substantiate that bed is the most common place for doing
"it".)
Spd
|
420.29 | the elephant, the ant, the monkey, and the coconut | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Tue Nov 10 1987 15:19 | 11 |
| The flea bit reminds me of a dirty joke about an ant, an elephant, and
a monkey.
But I shan't tell it here, even though it does have to do with sex, so
if you want to hear it, type
notes> forward
To: nm%video::osman
Subject: eyes: TWO sex: YES
|
420.30 | re - several | WELSWS::MANNION | Bonnets so red | Wed Nov 11 1987 10:28 | 18 |
| Some notes back, Bob Knowles asked if "Lay the bent tae the bonnie
broom" was to do with sex, as is "Tae gang tae the broom."
Well, no, it isn't. The refrain is one of a whole series of ballad
refrains which use plant lore as charms against evil spirits, sometimes
the Devil himself, sometimes just "a demon lover".
The bent or rush was protective against the evil eye, and doubly
so when combined with the broom, potent against witches and spirits.
there are several pages on this in Wimberley's Folklore in the English
and Scottish Ballads.
The second part of the "Bent and Broom" refrain runs "Fa la la la
la la la"( Imaginative eh?), and in the C16 the term Fa la often
refered to ballads or songs.
Phillip
|
420.31 | :-) | ESDC2::SOBOT | Steve Sobot, ESDC-II | Wed Nov 11 1987 11:32 | 2 |
|
Did you know that a bed can also be used for sleeping in ?
|
420.32 | that's bed! | TERZA::ZANE | | Wed Nov 11 1987 13:30 | 27 |
|
Wow, that brings to mind several words:
riverbed -- I suppposed that's like a waterbed.
flowerbed
bed of hay -- now a roll in the hay takes on a new shade
hotbed -- as in hotbed of radicals, but...
bedrock
bedded down
bed of a truck
bed of lava
good news, bed news?
I'm sure there are others...
Terza
|
420.33 | bedlam | INK::KALLIS | Remember how ephemeral is Earth. | Wed Nov 11 1987 13:52 | 5 |
| Re .31:
Yeah. If I'm "sleeping in," I'll probably use a bed. :-D
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
420.34 | you may already be a wiener ! | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Wed Nov 11 1987 16:26 | 9 |
| Speaking of beds, keep in mind that if you have sausage for breakfast,
you might have a bad day because you went
from bed to w�rst
|
420.35 | Rise and shine! :-) | ZYMRGY::LAMBERT | Resident Zymurgist | Wed Nov 11 1987 17:10 | 7 |
| Speaking of sex and breakfast...
I've heard that the favorite continental breakfast of the French is
A roll in bed with Honey.
-- Sam
|
420.36 | Good advice | AYOV18::ISMITH | Was (Not Was) | Thu Nov 12 1987 03:57 | 9 |
| Then there was the old piece of advice for my friends at university
as they were going out on friday night..
If you're not in bed by midnight you may as well go home.
Ian <8^}
|
420.37 | Honeymoon salad ? | LDP::BUSCH | | Thu Nov 12 1987 13:08 | 14 |
| Re .35
< Speaking of sex and breakfast...
< I've heard that the favorite continental breakfast of the French is
< A roll in bed with Honey.
I've heard that one referred to as a "honeymoon breakfast".
Now, do you know what a honeymoon salad is?
Lettuce alone.
Dave
|
420.38 | | GLIVET::RECKARD | Jon Reckard 264-7710 | Fri Nov 13 1987 08:02 | 7 |
| Re: .37
>Now, do you know what a honeymoon salad is?
> Lettuce alone
with no dressing
|
420.39 | Auf Deutche. | DSSDEV::STONE | Roy | Fri Nov 13 1987 08:52 | 1 |
| Was ist los mit _sex_?? 6 6 6 6 6 6 6
|
420.40 | next time one tells it ... | REGENT::MERRILL | Keep on passing open windows | Wed Nov 18 1987 09:13 | 4 |
| Thanks to Note 420.16, LEZAH::BOBBITT for an excellent classic pun!
One small clarification: the second gentleman says, "a Trey of Tarts"
[tray of tarts; three of hearts]
|
420.41 | And the well-read one says | WBA::WELLINGTON | Larry Wellington | Thu Dec 03 1987 04:10 | 2 |
| "An Essay of Trollope's"
|
420.42 | better late than never.. | HPSCAD::ALTMAN | BARB | Tue Jan 15 1991 19:46 | 10 |
| So I'm 4 years late - I just got to this!
Seems I remember an old Celtic custom that allowed a couple to marry
informally by placing a broom on the ground, joining hands and stating their
intention, then jumping over the broom. Perhaps "bending the bonnie
broom" refers to jumping into bed before jumping over the broom.
Of course, broom (in some spelling) grows on the heath, so doing it in
the field would bend down the broom.
|
420.43 | thought it was African? | TLE::RANDALL | Now *there's* the snow! | Wed Jan 16 1991 20:41 | 5 |
| Is that Celtic? That's interesting -- Alex Haley describes a very
similar custom in _Roots_ as the marriage ceremony among the
slaves in the south. I assumed it was an African tradition.
--bonnie
|
420.44 | | ELIS::KEW | Shake your tailfeather | Thu Jan 17 1991 16:06 | 18 |
| > <<< Note 420.42 by HPSCAD::ALTMAN "BARB" >>>
> -< better late than never.. >-
>
>So I'm 4 years late - I just got to this!
>
>Seems I remember an old Celtic custom that allowed a couple to marry
>informally by placing a broom on the ground, joining hands and stating their
>intention, then jumping over the broom. Perhaps "bending the bonnie
>broom" refers to jumping into bed before jumping over the broom.
>
>Of course, broom (in some spelling) grows on the heath, so doing it in
>the field would bend down the broom.
There is a northern english expression "Living over the brush" which means a
couple living together but not married. I would think it likely that these
are connected.
Jerry
|
420.45 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | bad wiring. That was probably it. Very bad. | Wed May 13 1992 21:24 | 14 |
| From: [email protected] (Erik Reuter)
Subject: Pronoun problems
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected] (Net Noise owner)
Organization: University of Illinois at Urbana
Date: Mon, 11 May 1992 04:40:24 GMT
Lines: 10
From Sunday's Chicago Tribune:
"Freud, who found sexual significance in dreams and in various aspects
of human behavior, makes no reference in the diary to his own sexual
history. That is not too surprising, given that he was 73 and already
fatally ill when he began it."
|