MEME WHILE: Great Trivia, HOT OFF THE PRESS!
Great Trivia
'A SHOT OF WHISKEY' - In the old west a .45 cartridge for a six-gun cost 12 cents, so did a glass of whiskey. If a cowhand was low on cash, he would often give the bartender a cartridge in exchange for a drink. This became known as a "shot" of whiskey.
BUYING THE FARM - This is synonymous with dying. During WW1 soldiers were given life insurance policies worth $5,000. This was about the price of an average farm so if you died you "bought the farm" for your survivors.
IRON CLAD CONTRACT - This came about from the ironclad ships of the Civil War. It meant something so strong it could not be broken.
RIFF RAFF - The Mississippi River was the main way of travelling from north to south. Riverboats carried passengers and freight but they were expensive so most people used rafts. Everything had the right of way over rafts which were considered cheap. The steering oar on the rafts was called a "riff" and this transposed into riff-raff, meaning low class.
COBWEB - The Old English word for “spider" was "cob.”
SHIP STATE ROOMS - Travelling by steamboat was considered the height of comfort. Passenger cabins on the boats were not numbered. Instead they were named after states. To this day cabins on ships are called staterooms.
SLEEP TIGHT- Early beds were made with a wooden frame. Ropes were tied across the frame in a crisscross pattern. A straw mattress was then put on top of the ropes. Over time the ropes stretched, causing the bed to sag. The owner would then tighten the ropes to get a better night’s sleep.
SHOWBOAT - These were floating theatres built on a barge that was pushed by a steamboat. These played small towns along the Mississippi River. Unlike the boat shown in the movie "Showboat,” these did not have an engine. They were gaudy and attention grabbing which is why we say someone who is being the life of the party is “showboating.”
OVER A BARREL - In the days before CPR, a drowning victim would be placed face down over a barrel and the barrel would be rolled back and forth in an effort to empty the lungs of water. It was rarely effective. If you are over a barrel, you are in deep trouble.
BARGE IN - Heavy freight was moved along the Mississippi in large barges pushed by steamboats. These were hard to control and would sometimes swing into piers or other boats. People would say they "barged in.”
HOGWASH - Steamboats carried both people and animals. Since pigs smelled so bad they would be washed before being put on board. The mud and other filth that was washed off were considered useless “hog wash.”
CURFEW - The word "curfew" comes from the French phrase "couvre-feu,” which means "cover the fire". It was used to describe the time of blowing out all lamps and candles. It was later adopted into Middle English as “curfeu" which later became the modern "curfew.” In the early American colonies homes had no real fireplaces so a fire was built in the center of the room. In order to make sure a fire did not get out of control during the night it was required that, by an agreed upon time, all fires would be covered with a clay pot called-a “curfew.”
BARRELS OF OIL - When the first oil wells were drilled, there was no provision for storing the liquid so they used water barrels. That is why, to this day, we speak of barrels of oil rather than gallons.
HOT OFF THE PRESS - As the paper goes through the rotary printing press friction causes it to heat up Therefore, if you grab the paper right off the press, it’s hot. The expression means to get immediate information.
There, don't you feel smarter now?
'A SHOT OF WHISKEY' - In the old west a .45 cartridge for a six-gun cost 12 cents, so did a glass of whiskey. If a cowhand was low on cash, he would often give the bartender a cartridge in exchange for a drink. This became known as a "shot" of whiskey.
BUYING THE FARM - This is synonymous with dying. During WW1 soldiers were given life insurance policies worth $5,000. This was about the price of an average farm so if you died you "bought the farm" for your survivors.
IRON CLAD CONTRACT - This came about from the ironclad ships of the Civil War. It meant something so strong it could not be broken.
RIFF RAFF - The Mississippi River was the main way of travelling from north to south. Riverboats carried passengers and freight but they were expensive so most people used rafts. Everything had the right of way over rafts which were considered cheap. The steering oar on the rafts was called a "riff" and this transposed into riff-raff, meaning low class.
COBWEB - The Old English word for “spider" was "cob.”
SHIP STATE ROOMS - Travelling by steamboat was considered the height of comfort. Passenger cabins on the boats were not numbered. Instead they were named after states. To this day cabins on ships are called staterooms.
SLEEP TIGHT- Early beds were made with a wooden frame. Ropes were tied across the frame in a crisscross pattern. A straw mattress was then put on top of the ropes. Over time the ropes stretched, causing the bed to sag. The owner would then tighten the ropes to get a better night’s sleep.
SHOWBOAT - These were floating theatres built on a barge that was pushed by a steamboat. These played small towns along the Mississippi River. Unlike the boat shown in the movie "Showboat,” these did not have an engine. They were gaudy and attention grabbing which is why we say someone who is being the life of the party is “showboating.”
OVER A BARREL - In the days before CPR, a drowning victim would be placed face down over a barrel and the barrel would be rolled back and forth in an effort to empty the lungs of water. It was rarely effective. If you are over a barrel, you are in deep trouble.
BARGE IN - Heavy freight was moved along the Mississippi in large barges pushed by steamboats. These were hard to control and would sometimes swing into piers or other boats. People would say they "barged in.”
HOGWASH - Steamboats carried both people and animals. Since pigs smelled so bad they would be washed before being put on board. The mud and other filth that was washed off were considered useless “hog wash.”
CURFEW - The word "curfew" comes from the French phrase "couvre-feu,” which means "cover the fire". It was used to describe the time of blowing out all lamps and candles. It was later adopted into Middle English as “curfeu" which later became the modern "curfew.” In the early American colonies homes had no real fireplaces so a fire was built in the center of the room. In order to make sure a fire did not get out of control during the night it was required that, by an agreed upon time, all fires would be covered with a clay pot called-a “curfew.”
BARRELS OF OIL - When the first oil wells were drilled, there was no provision for storing the liquid so they used water barrels. That is why, to this day, we speak of barrels of oil rather than gallons.
HOT OFF THE PRESS - As the paper goes through the rotary printing press friction causes it to heat up Therefore, if you grab the paper right off the press, it’s hot. The expression means to get immediate information.
There, don't you feel smarter now?
Each shack rarely with a car parked near it are perfectly squared with a quartered roof with all four ends that runs up to a chimney in the center of the house.
If not a fireplace, a coal or a wood burning stove must have been directly below the chimney used both for cooking and winters that can really be cold despite it rarely snowing in Alabama.
I know of few handgun rounds that are currently valued near the same as a cocktail.
(Black Talons come to mind.)
I guess mass production has advanced more on cartridges and more
taxes have been forced on liquor since the free market days of the old west.
after the Black Talons were inaccurately labeled "cop killers" by looting scum BATF.
It was in the early 90's when miraculously whites and blacks and other shades
were all getting along famously in spite of the asinine policies of the Clinton gang of thugs.
https://www.guns.com/news/2011/10/26/...
"n 1991 Winchester introduced a new line of ammunition at that year’s Shot Show.
Little did anyone in that company know they had just produced what was to become t
he most hated ammunition on the planet, the Black Talon.
Black Talon bullets were coated in a black molybdenum disulfide, otherwise known as
Lubalox, (not Teflon as was reported over and over again throughout the 90s).
When the bullet expanded it formed six petals with perpendicular tips.
After they were used in the 101 California Street Shootings and then the Long Island
Railroad shooting, both in 1993, the media and those in office wasted little time in
going after the Black Talon ammunition, now bearing the “cop killer” label.
The media frenzy made the bullets out to be so bad that it seemed a person could
not survive any wound sustained by these projectiles—they would rip huge chunks
out tissue and bone right out of your body.
By the end of 1993, Winchester had pulled the Black Talon ammunition off the market
as the company caved in to the hysteria surrounding the scandal. There was never
any real proof that these bullets kill cops deader than other bullets but those at
Winchester realized they were on the losing end of the battle.
So what are the “cop killer” bullets now? According to the asinine Brady Campaign, it is any
hollowpoint bullet on the market. For those of you that don’t know what a hollowpoint bullet
really does, it is designed so that it does not over penetrate instead relying on it doing
more tissue damage and expending all of its kinetic energy inside the target.
This means that is less likely to penetrate a vest than other solid bullets.
Wait, I thought “cop killers” were designed to penetrate polices vests?
Well, it would seem once a bullet gets painted with the capricious “cop killer” brush,
you don’t have to let a little things like “precedence” and “reality” get in your way."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Here's a more recent review and armor and gel penetration test.
https://www.defensivecarry.com/thread...
Did anyone check to see if any of these are actually true?
I checked the first one, and found this:
Why a Shot of Whiskey Is Called a “Shot”
The most likely origin for the word (and unfortunately the most boring) is found deep in Old English. In Nathan Bailey’s 1721 compendium, An Universal Etymological English Dictionary, Bailey says “shot” referred to “a Flagon which the Host gives to his Guest if they drink above a Shilling.” A similar note in Bailey’s dictionary for “ale-shot” indicates “a Reckoning or Part to be paid at an ale house,” aka a tab for drinking all that ale. About 300 years of etymological evolution can explain the shrinking of those shots down to a single gulp and the disappearance of the “reckoning” sense of the word.
OK, enough boring etymology. On to the fun theories (that are total bull, but still pretty cool).
A few stories erroneously associate the term “shot” with the Old West. One claims that cowboys paid for their whiskey at the local saloon by trading booze for bullets.
https://www.thrillist.com/culture/sho...
Those were the only two I looked up, and regardless of their veracity, these were all interesting and amusing. Thanks, OUC!
I sometimes wonder how some of the more common uses of words/ concepts/ metaphors came to be. Some, quite clever and others ?!?!?!
We also must acknowledge that English is made up of every other language's words . . . and a lot gets lost or found in translation.