ChatterBank3 mins ago
And following Quizmonster's question, here's another one ........
19 Answers
Why do people say, "I turned around and said", or "he turned around and said". Do people really 'turn around' and say? Do you? I don't, unless the person I'm aiming to talk to is behind me when I want to talk to them. :o)
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No best answer has yet been selected by naomi24. 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.Here's a quote, Naomi, from an edition of the Listener published in August 1969...
"Before my parents could turn round and ask what I was going to do for a living, I went back and answered that I'd already got a job as a ship's musician."
I don't believe this involved an actual physical turning-round either, so at least we can say the idea has been about for 40 years or so. It doesn't explain why people say it, but it shows they've been saying it for some time! I suppose it just indicates that there is a 'flow' involved, like a record turning, as it were.
"Before my parents could turn round and ask what I was going to do for a living, I went back and answered that I'd already got a job as a ship's musician."
I don't believe this involved an actual physical turning-round either, so at least we can say the idea has been about for 40 years or so. It doesn't explain why people say it, but it shows they've been saying it for some time! I suppose it just indicates that there is a 'flow' involved, like a record turning, as it were.
Well according to the free dictionary.com the word accident does not necessarily indicate something undesirable (see definition (b) together with its example):
a. An unexpected and undesirable event, especially one resulting in damage or harm: car accidents on icy roads.
b. An unforeseen incident: A series of happy accidents led to his promotion.
a. An unexpected and undesirable event, especially one resulting in damage or harm: car accidents on icy roads.
b. An unforeseen incident: A series of happy accidents led to his promotion.
QM, I believe this annoying phrase has been around for a lot longer than 40 years. I remember an old chap I worked at least 45 years ago used to 'turn round and say' so many times during a conversation that I felt dizzy.
He was nearing retirement age and I had the impression he had been spinning for a long while, so I think this silly phrase has been around for a long while.
He was nearing retirement age and I had the impression he had been spinning for a long while, so I think this silly phrase has been around for a long while.
You could well be right, Thicko, but the illustration I offered earlier is the furthest back the phrase has so far been traced.
I don't know whether you saw Victoria Coren's TV series Balderdash & Piffle, but that was all about finding earlier examples of words/phrases than the scholars at The Oxford English Dictionary had been able to find. If you can produce suitable evidence, I'm sure the dictionary's editors would be delighted to see it. Good luck!
I don't know whether you saw Victoria Coren's TV series Balderdash & Piffle, but that was all about finding earlier examples of words/phrases than the scholars at The Oxford English Dictionary had been able to find. If you can produce suitable evidence, I'm sure the dictionary's editors would be delighted to see it. Good luck!
A very similar phrase appears in the lyrics to 'She' from the Monkees second album:
(She!) She told me that she loved me,
And like a fool I believed her from the start
(She!) She said she'd never hurt me,
But then she turned around and broke my heart.
This was released in early January 1967 so the song must have been written in 1966 at the latest.
(She!) She told me that she loved me,
And like a fool I believed her from the start
(She!) She said she'd never hurt me,
But then she turned around and broke my heart.
This was released in early January 1967 so the song must have been written in 1966 at the latest.
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