We used to say "any apples or nuts?" before the Americanisation of the universe and anyone who made you sing a song was a c**t.
30.10.2025 20:53 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0@carlowdigital.bsky.social
We used to say "any apples or nuts?" before the Americanisation of the universe and anyone who made you sing a song was a c**t.
30.10.2025 20:53 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0That sounds familiar. I was lucky that the Da was a fitter so I had a large supply of industrial ball bearings or steelies which, had I actually been any good at playing marbles, would have given me an unfair advantage.
28.10.2025 14:53 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0"Steelies are worth more."
28.10.2025 14:47 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0And then getting people to pay with their own hard-earned money to have propaganda and lies fed to them. That's the bit that always gets me. Like going into a shop and asking "Can I have some food guaranteed to give me food poisoning please. How much is that?"
28.10.2025 12:33 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0I worked in Nimble Fingers in Stillorgan* in the late 70s. We catered to a lot of teachers looking for art supplies. An obviously frazzled, attractive woman came in one day, charged up to me at the counter and asked breathlessly "Excuse me, where can I get felt?" I just walked away.
15.10.2025 13:18 β π 6 π 1 π¬ 0 π 0Oooffff, apparently Hodge Figgis are on the side of Big Genocide, including firing a staff member for his stance on supporting Palestine.
Shop in your LOCAL (non-UK operated) bookshops, people.
www.instagram.com/p/DNwUzXpWAt...
This is nothing new. When Harry's Game was charting in the UK in 1982, a producer in RTE, Fiach O'Broin, got a call from the BBC who were concerned it might contain some terrorist references. Fiach told the caller it was just la-la-la which kept them happy.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=4zHT...
β’ Al Overview The idiom "you can't lick a badger twice" means you can't trick or deceive someone a second time after they've been tricked once. It's a warning that if someone has already been deceived, they are unlikely to fall for the same trick again. Here's a more detailed explanation: β’ Licking: "Licking" in this context means to trick or deceive someone. β’ Badger: The badger is a wild animal, and the phrase likely originates from the historical sport of badger baiting where dogs were used to harass
Someone on Threads noticed you can type any random sentence into Google, then add βmeaningβ afterwards, and youβll get an AI explanation of a famous idiom or phrase you just made up. Here is mine
23.04.2025 10:15 β π 5085 π 1653 π¬ 649 π 1084Nope. It happened twice in our primary school in the 60s too, Pat, albeit nothing to do with Cocal-Cola. Chap turned up, did a bunch of, it must be said, impressive tricks with a yo yo and then left. Usually it was only priests who came trying to sell us magic.
24.03.2025 14:11 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0I heard similar about a well-known Dublin restaurant substituting parsnip for banana to make banana splits when they ran out. Which is, you know, bananas.
20.01.2025 14:59 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0"There's only so much storm you can take,
There's only so much tea you can drink in the morning".
Susan McKeown