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ChatterBank1 min ago
I can remember my Dad having many Phrases that got a lot of use during my childhood. One ( of many ) was used after he put something in the oven. He would slam the door and say " Number One Gun fired , SAHH ! " ( as you might guess he was in the forces ). It always made me and my sisters laugh .Does anyone else have any memories of their Dad's ( or Mums ) catchphrases?
No best answer has yet been selected by airbolt. 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.When I asked what was for tea, the reply was always "bread and water".
If I ever asked my dad where he was going, he would always say either, "There and back, see how far it is." or "Off me rocker."
My mum still describes her height as "Five foot one and a tealeaf." and she says, "'Round the Jinny 'Orner." for "'Round the corner".
My grandad, having got comfortably sitting, and not wanting to get up again for something asked for (a cuppa maybe) would say 'I can't. I've got a bone in me leg'.
My nan would warn, every time I went for the spoonful of sugar ('neat' grains into my mouth) 'you'll get sugar diabetes' which was said many many years before it was heard about generally. The significance was lost on the little me. Later I realised that it was probably because she had originally hailed from Bury St. Edmunds, near which town was a huge sugar beet factory (is it still there?). It must have been known amongst the folk there long before the general population realised about the illness.
My mum used to drive me around the bend with this one. If I misplaced something and would say "Mum, have you seen my satchel/hairbrush/book/tights/whatever?" She would calmly say "I know where it is." I would look at her expectantly and then she delivered the killer line.
"YOU'LL FIND IT WHERE YOU LEFT IT."
Being a gullible muggins, I fell for it every time.