Viewing 10 posts - 1 through 10 (of 21 total)
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  • #16530

    ok soft mick,who is he,whats he done,why is he soft,anybody know a soft mick?

    #473789
    #473790
    #473791

    Knock off Nigel…we know what he’s famous for :lol: ooooo and Dodgy Dave :lol:

    #473792

    I know a couple …. but they aren’t famous, so i guess that does not count :wink:

    #473793

    I always wondered about Gordon Bennett….wonder who he was… just a minute will google it

    Ok as if by magic google provides the answer….

    GORDON BENNETT-A slang term which means ‘Oh God.’ Gordon Bennett was a real person, an America newspaper baron whose antics were so extravagant and shocking they would lead people to exclaim ‘Gordon Bennett.’

    Lol Maybe we should change it to RUPERT MURDOCK :D
    :?

    #473794

    Magic Martin………does exist…………you want it, he gets it……..no questions asked
    :lol:

    #473795

    when ppl say JESUS H CHRIST
    WHAT IS this h they speak of? i didnt know he had a middle name
    anybody know what it is?

    #473796

    @best man wrote:

    when ppl say JESUS H CHRIST
    WHAT IS this h they speak of? i didnt know he had a middle name
    anybody know what it is?

    Holier than thou .. :)

    #473797

    There have been various theories, but the one that seems most plausible is that it comes from the Greek monogram for Jesus, IHS or IHC. This is formed from the first two letters plus the last letter of his name in Greek (the letters iota, eta, and sigma; in the second instance, the C is a Byzantine Greek form of sigma). The H is actually the capital letter form of eta, but churchgoers who were unfamiliar with Greek took it to be a Latin H.
    The oath does indeed seem to be American, first recorded in print at the end of the nineteenth century, although around 1910 Mark Twain wrote in his autobiography that the expression had been in use about 1850 and was considered old even then. Its long survival must have a lot to do with its cadence, and the way that an especially strong emphasis can be placed on the H.

    Nineteenth-century Americans weren’t the first to take the Greek letters to be Latin ones – since medieval times the monogram has often been expanded into Latin phrases, such as Iesus Hominum Salvator, Jesus Saviour of Men, In Hoc Signo (vinces), in this sign (thou shalt conquer), and In Hac Salus, in this (cross) is salvation.

Viewing 10 posts - 1 through 10 (of 21 total)

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