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Friday, December 06, 2013

Cat's Meow



Don asked about the phrase the cat’s meow. It was 1920’s slang for something worthy of admiration. It was allied to the cat’s whiskers and the cat’s pajamas. For some reason, it became a fad during the Jazz Age to use fanciful animal images to express approval.


Other products of the fad included
·      ant’s pants
·      bullfrog’s beard
·      butterfly’s boots
·      canary’s tusks
·      caterpillar’s kimono
·      clam’s garter
·      cuckoo’s chin
·      duck’s nuts
·      duck’s quack
·      eel’s ankle
·      elephant’s adenoids
·      elephant’s instep
·      elephant’s manicure
·      gnat’s elbows
·      kipper’s knickers
·      leopard’s spots
·      monkey’s eyebrows
·      oyster’s earrings
·      pig’s wings
·      sardine’s whiskers
·      snake’s hips
·      tadpole’s teddies
·      tiger’s stripes
·      turtle’s neck

Available from McFarland & Co.: Word Parts Dictionary, 2nd edition

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LANGUAGE MYTHS #5: Not enough room to swing a dead cat, Not playing with a full deck, Not worth a tinker's damn, Posh, Rule of thumb

  Listen to the podcast here .   Not   enough   room   to   swing   a   cat   (cramped  quarters) MYTH:   The   cat   was   the   cat-o-nine...