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In reply to the discussion: Phrases you don't hear anymore: [View all]Jeebo
(2,349 posts)136. "The Life of Riley" was a 1950s TV show.
And a 1940s radio show. I used to watch it on TV in the late 1950s when I was a kid. I never knew it was a radio show in the 1940s, before I was born, until I got a Sirius satellite radio in my car a few years ago and discovered that they play episodes from that 1940s radio show often on their old-time radio classics station.
About 15 years ago I had a cat who came from one of my neighbors' houses and took up with me. I walked by him snoozing on a corner of a bookcase in my living room one day and suddenly had the thought, This cat has people feeding him, opening doors for him, giving him affection, he's living the life of Riley, so he must be ... Riley! And that was the perfect name for that cat. Somehow it just fit him to a T.
-- Ron
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Holy cow. Never understood it but but always thought cows somehow deserved a phrase like that.
dgauss
Dec 21
#8
I sold my Grand Baroque patterned sterling silver set I inherited from my mother. Nodody polishes silver any more.
CTyankee
Dec 21
#81
I say Bull in a china shop quite often and yes I have not one but two sets of fine china
yellowdogintexas
Dec 23
#177
my mom had some weird sayings. Can't remember all them, but pants were britches.
LeftInTX
Dec 23
#186
In college in the late sixties we actually made fun of ourselves by saying "farm out" and "out of state".....
EarnestPutz
Dec 21
#122
There's one I wish would go away, well a few, but " threw up in my mouth a little" takes the cake, so to speak.
yorkster
Dec 21
#63
"Bless Your Heart will never go away as long as there are still Southern grand mothers. !!! nt
yellowdogintexas
Dec 23
#182
I have a neighbor that had a previous dog before it succumbed to an age related illness
Niagara
Dec 22
#146
still say copacetic from time to time. It was a favorite of my grandfather! nt
yellowdogintexas
Dec 23
#181