Quizzes & Puzzles19 mins ago
Meaning Of "see You On The Ice" ?
11 Answers
I have always been interested in sayings from different parts of the UK (& beyond!).
When I was a very young man back in the late 50s / 60s, born & bred in the South End of Liverpool, when I was going out somewhere my father would always say "SEE YOU ON THE ICE".
I had forgotten about this until last week when a neighbour said exactly the same thing to me ! I asked her if she had any idea where this originated from BUT she said that her father would say it to her each time she went out when she was a very young lady.
Now this lady is in her 80s so we are really going back in time here.
Please can anybody cast any light on this saying ?
Both the lady & I originate from North West England if this possibly givers a pointer.
When I was a very young man back in the late 50s / 60s, born & bred in the South End of Liverpool, when I was going out somewhere my father would always say "SEE YOU ON THE ICE".
I had forgotten about this until last week when a neighbour said exactly the same thing to me ! I asked her if she had any idea where this originated from BUT she said that her father would say it to her each time she went out when she was a very young lady.
Now this lady is in her 80s so we are really going back in time here.
Please can anybody cast any light on this saying ?
Both the lady & I originate from North West England if this possibly givers a pointer.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I've never heard the expresssion so I googled - It says here
we bid each other farewell in the typical Fenland valediction "see you on the ice", which means: we may not meet for a long while, but be assured that eventually we will.
http:// www.gua rdian.c o.uk/tr avel/20 09/apr/ 04/ice- skating -fens-c ambridg eshire
we bid each other farewell in the typical Fenland valediction "see you on the ice", which means: we may not meet for a long while, but be assured that eventually we will.
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Soemone on this thread says it derives from the Warrington Fish Market, but I've never heard it pesonally from anyone.
http:// www.sth elens-c onnect. net/for ums/top ic/5500 4-sayin gs-from -your-p arents/
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Thank You ALL for your feed-back with this one.
Seeing as I have started I will add another for us to conjur with.
When I was a little lad & i did something silly my father (born in Liverpool) would say, (quote) "ACT DAFT & I WILL BUY YOU A COAL YARD". I have asked so many people from all over the UK during my lifetime & I have YET to find ANYBODY who has heard this before , How about YOU ??
Seeing as I have started I will add another for us to conjur with.
When I was a little lad & i did something silly my father (born in Liverpool) would say, (quote) "ACT DAFT & I WILL BUY YOU A COAL YARD". I have asked so many people from all over the UK during my lifetime & I have YET to find ANYBODY who has heard this before , How about YOU ??
Found here..
http:// www.red andwhit ekop.co m/forum /index. php?top ic=1156 15.0
Act soft, la, and I'll buy yer a coalyard: wise up, or take the consequences
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Act soft, la, and I'll buy yer a coalyard: wise up, or take the consequences
I love this sort of thing, sorry I can't help as I've never heard of either saying before, but what prompted me to answer was I did hear somebody once say 'Act stupid and I'll buy you a pub' - I can only think that one time even during a recession pubs were aways in business - the person who said this was from Lancashire.
Jabez is a Hebrew name meaning "man of sorrows"!
My late father, a Scot, and late mother from Birmingham both used the phrase, "See you on the ice in the fishmarket." As you can guess they lived in Warrington. I always assumed that, if it meant anything beyond see you later, it meant you looked like a dead fish!
My late father, a Scot, and late mother from Birmingham both used the phrase, "See you on the ice in the fishmarket." As you can guess they lived in Warrington. I always assumed that, if it meant anything beyond see you later, it meant you looked like a dead fish!
It means see you when we're both dead in the mortuary - probably from the second world war. It relates to the blocks of ice used in earlier days to keep the bodies fresh. My Mum used it all the time and I heard it for the first time since 1977 on the telly yesterday. It think it was 24 hours in A & E!! Penny
I just Googled this to see if there was any reference to it online. I remember my Mum's uncle saying it to me and my brother when we were leaving his house after a visit. I never knew what it meant or what the origins were, but this was in Bolton in North West England. Some interesting interpretations here though :) XX