"An expression to indicate the speaker is laying it on the line, telling it like it is, getting down to brass tacks - with the connotation of telling someone what he or she needs to know but probably doesn't want to hear. According to Little Rock attorney Alston Jennings, who submitted this southernism to Richard Allen's February 2, 1991, 'Our Town' column in the Arkansas Gazette, the expression has its roots in a story about an elephant that escaped from the zoo and wandered into a woman's cabbage patch. The woman observed the elephant pulling up her cabbages with its trunk and eating them. She called the police to report that there was a cow in her cabbage patch pulling up cabbages with its tail. When the surprised police officer inquired as to what the cow was doing with the cabbages, the woman replied, 'You wouldn't believe me if I told you!'" From "Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins" by Robert Hendrickson (Fact on File, New York, 1997)"Do you have an expression that you use frequently? Do you know where that phrase came from? You can find out here.
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
The Phrase That Pays
How about those phrases you use on a daily basis? You know those "different" phrases that you use frequently to express yourself? I use "how the cow ate the cabbage" a lot. However, recently I have had to explain what that means because I am finding that some don't know. It comes from this story:
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