Attempted Robbery In Cape Town
ChatterBank3 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Ricky Jones. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Dear In A, Yes...I love these old stories, too. Ones such as the belief that 'posh' is an acronym for 'port out starboard home' or that Coleridge wrote 'water, water everywhere and not a drop to drink'. (It isn't and he didn't.) Our language and urban mythology is awash with them.
Actually, 'wallop' as a colloquial name for beer dates back only to the 1930s and I don't believe it was ever applied to lemonade. Also, one old meaning of 'cods' was 'testicles', so I think that is a much more likely connection, in much the same way as we today use the b-word for those organs to mean 'nonsense', too. In fact, 'codswallop' itself is not recorded anywhere prior to the 1960s, as it happens. Had it beeen around in Victorian times, as claimed, I cannot imagine Dickens would not have used it in the mouth of one of his London characters. Cheers