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13 Dec 00 - 08:55 AM (#356293) Subject: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: P05139 I just felt like starting a thread with a silly title!! Anyway, when you're muttering under your breath, what do you say?? CAREFUL!!! |
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13 Dec 00 - 08:59 AM (#356296) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: Mrrzy Rackin' frackin' is one of my favorites, when not actually using bad language. I love rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb though, I was taught once that if you have several people muttering that it sounds like a crowd of actual conversations, like a cocktail party... has it ever been used for that in reality? |
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13 Dec 00 - 09:04 AM (#356301) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: Snuffy I have "known" for ages that stage actors always say "Rhubarb, rhubarb, rhubarb" when they are in the background in a crowd scene. It's one of those folk-legends which may or may not be true. Wassail! V |
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13 Dec 00 - 09:05 AM (#356303) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: alison yep... many times in stage productions along with "radishes" and "cabbages" but if you want to look sexy.. stand besdie a mirror and mouth the words "prune juice" without actually saying them... *grin* slainte alison |
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13 Dec 00 - 09:31 AM (#356321) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: Allan C. A choir director of mine once said that if we should forget the lyrics, we should sing, "watermelon". It works well in that context. A friend once taught me a phrase which can be used as an anathema, as "sweet nothings", or for a variety of purposes. Rada-Frada-Forda-Seeda-Saw (all "a"s are "short") One of my favorite things to do with it is to whisper it with a tone of urgency into someone's ear. Have fun with it! |
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13 Dec 00 - 10:08 AM (#356337) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: Irish sergeant I'm going on a limb here but I seem to recall that the cry "Rhubarb, rhubarb, rhubarb!" was used as an inflight alert by fighter pilots during the second world war to let their comrades know that there were enemy fighters in the area and a fight was imminent. I forget where I read it, so I may be mistaken but I don't think I am. Of course I look forward to any confirmation or refutation from Mudcatters in the know. Kindest reguards, Neil |
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13 Dec 00 - 10:15 AM (#356340) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: Allan C. I can easily believe that, Neil. "Rhubarb" is a term, used in baseball, which refers to a fight. Baseball terms were often used by Americans during that war for one reason or another. It makes sense that it would have been used to warn of an impending air battle. |
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13 Dec 00 - 11:04 AM (#356357) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: wysiwyg So a country fight would be a rubebarb. Here it's rudebards. I just say "What a crop of phlox." Didn't the Coneheads say something like "Mepps! Mepps!" (Wasn't there a Mepps in Silence of the Lambs? No that was Miggs, and was he the one who killed himself swallowing his foul tongue?) MEPs is also Navy lingo for military enlistment processing, I think, where our boys went. I bet our boys muttered it a lot on basic training while the marched, asleep in formation. Sheep and chickens have it down pat. Sheep: "Co-o-o-o-rn.... co-o-o-o-o-o-o-rn..... co-o-o-o-o-o-o-rn...." rather forlornly until you come in WITH corn, then it sounds quite threatening. "Cornnn...! Cornnn...!" Chickens are extremely doubtful, sliding accusatorily up through chromatic scales of diapproval: "Awwww? Awwww? Uh uhhhh...! Uh uhhhh...! Awww....?" And cats. ~Susan |
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13 Dec 00 - 11:27 AM (#356372) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: annamill Drat and Phooey! Blast! My two favorites. I thought "Rubarb, rubarb, rubarb" was used by carney people to warn of impending danger from the rubes (locals). Funny how we all have different "facts". Love, annamill |
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13 Dec 00 - 11:32 AM (#356376) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: Mrrzy What was that wonderful movie about baseball and a cat named Rhubarb? |
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13 Dec 00 - 11:35 AM (#356378) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: Mrrzy But back to what to mutter: I also have a trove of swear words in other languages which come in handy sometimes - one of my faves is Egye meg a fene, pr. kind of Edge-yeh meg aw fehneh, which literally means Eat(3rd person imperative)- completely/fully - the - devil (in the sense of Dickens, scared the devil/Dickens out of me sense, not Satan), which roughly equates to Let the devil eat (it or them or whatever you're swearing about) all up! |
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13 Dec 00 - 11:37 AM (#356380) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: Allan C. Carny slang for announcing a fight is: "Hey, Rube!" - I don't know why. |
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13 Dec 00 - 11:40 AM (#356383) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: annamill Oh. Ok. Sorry. Thanks Allan. (I was close though) L.A. |
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13 Dec 00 - 11:47 AM (#356387) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: Bert Metamorhosing pollywogs! I always thought that the rhubarb background noise started with The Goon Show |
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13 Dec 00 - 12:04 PM (#356396) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: Troll Magafratzin Raginfratz! has always been one of my favorites along with " Sweet Mother of Pearl" and "Godfrey Daniels!" Both, of course from the mutterings of the great W.C.Fields. Fields never used profanity. But he could still swear like a sailor. troll |
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13 Dec 00 - 12:24 PM (#356420) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: Bill D extras in crowd scenes also used to mutter "peas & carrots".... and my father's muttered imprecation was..."goddandruffandsomeofititches" |
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13 Dec 00 - 12:48 PM (#356446) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: mousethief "rissa frigga fogga mogga " or words to that effect. My daughter (age 13) says "razzum frazzum." Alex |
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13 Dec 00 - 02:03 PM (#356517) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: Seamus Kennedy I use the lines from Johnny Dangerously. Fargin Bastidge, Cork Soaker, Sominabatch. Ice hold! Try it you'll like it! All the best. Seamus |
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13 Dec 00 - 02:05 PM (#356524) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: mousethief One of my favorite epithets is Sonobavich. Sounds like a Russian name, and yet it doesn't.... |
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13 Dec 00 - 02:14 PM (#356541) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: Mrrzy One of somebody's favorite musicians is the famous Russian Ripshercorsetoff... My dad used to exclaim What in the ever-lovin' blue-eyed world is... when appropriate; I was never sure why... and I also like (from a song! This is a musical thread!) "My old man's a cotton-picking finger-licking feather-flicking chicken-plucker, whaddya think about that?" - say THAT three times fast! |
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13 Dec 00 - 02:39 PM (#356561) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: Kim C Seamus! I remember that movie! Also in What About Bob, the neighbors couldn't pronounce English swear words very well. I usually say, "son of a...." and stop there. Sometimes I'll add the word biscuit. If I'm really peeved, I'll add the other b-word. If I'm surprised, I'll use the ol' "sonofagun." |
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13 Dec 00 - 05:04 PM (#356690) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: annamill I love Johnny Dangerously! Fargin bastig! L.A. |
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13 Dec 00 - 07:17 PM (#356819) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: Uncle_DaveO Two things: In high school, back in the late Pleistocene, an angry parent came to Miss--what was her name?--the Latin teacher, and complained bitterly that her Johnny was repeating Latin swear words he'd learned in her class. Seems he was going around and muttering in dark tones, "Mirabile dictu!!!" Miss Whatzerface had to explain that it merely meant "Strange to say!" In the late lamented comic strip Pogo, the eponymous Pogo was known to yell at the top of his lungs, "Gosh-a-mickle, dickle-pickle, GEE WILLIEWOBBLES!!!" Hard to improve on that! Dave Oesterreich |
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13 Dec 00 - 07:35 PM (#356834) Subject: RE: BS: Rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb From: Bill D and rowrbazzle was one of Albert's.... |