View Full Version : Cliche Origins


T Paul
06-08-2002, 12:05 PM
Got the Cat By The Tail

Okay my husband brought up the cliché “got the cat by the tail” today, and I asked him what he thought he meant but he didn’t know. So now we are curious (and yes curiosity killed the cat). I have been searching web sites for clichés and their origins and meanings, but so far no luck on that one. Any ideas?

chris h
06-08-2002, 12:19 PM
Possibly......


http://www.ability.org.uk/writers_resources_style_guides.html


http://www.angelfire.com/nd/danscorpio/word3.html

Doug Nelson
06-08-2002, 12:27 PM
I've never heard 'cat by the tail', but 'got a tiger by the tail' comes from the belief that as long as you held onto the tiger's tail he couldn't kill you, though you're in for a rough ride.

chris h
06-08-2002, 12:36 PM
To 'Ride the Tiger' alludes in history to dictators who of course could never dismount.

T Paul
06-08-2002, 12:52 PM
Yeah...I finally found it on an idiom web site thanks to Doug's redirection from cat to tiger.

"have a tiger by the tail "
Informal: to find oneself in a situation that has turned out to be much more difficult to control than one had expected.

Source: wordreference.com, The Collins English Dictionary

And Chris there is also an idiom about riding a tiger...

"he who rides a tiger is afraid to dismount"
Source: Bertram, Anne (Bowl of Cherries)


Idiom Web Site (http://www.doghause.com/idioms.html)

THANKS

-T

rondon
06-08-2002, 01:52 PM
anybody know the other way to skin a cat ?

Mike Needham
06-10-2002, 04:06 PM
hydrochloric acid dip?:o:

Sanda
06-10-2002, 04:42 PM
Poor cats seem to figure in a lot of clichés like the one "not enough room to swing a cat". Poor cats.

rondon
06-10-2002, 04:47 PM
and lets not forget "as nervous as a long tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs "

DannyRaphael
06-10-2002, 05:52 PM
Hmmm...What's the matter?

"Cat got your tongue?"

And if so, where's he got it? :rolleyes:

T Paul
06-10-2002, 06:20 PM
there are a lot of cat ones....

"let the cat out of the bag "

"copycat"

"look what the cat dragged in"

"cat's pajamas "

"like a cat on a hot tin roof"

"raining cats and dogs"

"when the cat's away, the mice will play"


:cat:

Jakaleena
06-10-2002, 08:36 PM
When I was a kid, every time I'd say, "What for?" my mom would answer

"Cat's fur to make kitten britches"

To this day I have no idea what that one even means...

T Paul
06-10-2002, 08:43 PM
Okay Jak this is what I found.....

The phrase "Cat's fur to make kitten britches" is a joking nonsense reply to the question "What for?" or "What's that for?" It's a pun on the words for and fur, which are often pronounced identically.

There are other examples of this sort of wordplay in response to questions:

"So what?"
"Sew buttons"

or
"Well?"
"The well is deep" (or "dry")

Although hard evidence is lacking, the expression cat's fur to make kitten britches seems to date back to the nineteenth century. It isn't specifically associated with any region of the country.

And now you know the rest of the story.
-T

Jakaleena
06-10-2002, 08:51 PM
Yeah, I think as I got a bit older I started to understand the play on words between "what for" and "Cat's fur" - it was the "kitten britches" part that I could never figure out.

And I always got:

"Well?"

"That's a deep subject, be sure not to fall in..."

Steve Taylor
06-13-2002, 08:21 PM
Originally posted by Sanda
Poor cats seem to figure in a lot of clichés like the one "not enough room to swing a cat". Poor cats.

One of my favorites "He/She is running around like a one legged cat trying to bury s*** on a frozen pond"

Not sure if this one will make it past the censor but it sure describes some people that I know.

Steve

Sam
06-14-2002, 01:54 AM
I just had to post this one ... from my favourite cartoonist of all time, Gary Larson. (hope I don't get into trouble for this ...!)

Sam

d_kendal
06-14-2002, 11:15 AM
:lol: thanks for posting that Sam! I love "Far side" comics!!

- David :)

rondon
06-14-2002, 03:04 PM
i'll put that one in my mental book there steve taylor