I was reminiscing, thinking of some of the old sayings we hear no longer.
My Dad never called a bicycle a bicycle..but rather a "wheel". likely a word derived from the old fashioned bikes with a 5' front wheel.
Some of his phrases I suspect, were very old..and passed down through generations. When something was all messed up..he used to say it was all "bollocksed" up! I can only believe that it came from our old Scottish
heritage, or a even English from colonial times, since a word often used by those from the UK is "bollocks!"
More lately we used to hear a slippery guy called a "fox'. ..And old sayings like... "your team of horses, couldn't pull a setting hen off her nest".
Then there was, "he couldn't fight his way out of a paper bag!" *
How about "tin Lizzie", to describe the model A and T Fords?. ...Or .."Wow, he was going like 60!"
So may, and so many "regional" ones..I remember when on maneuvers in deep mud, some of our southern born troops calling that mud.."gumbo"..
OK..your turn..
* Curiously, back when that phrase ws used, somebody tried an experiment with a professional boxer. If the paper bag were quite roomy, he couldn't fight his way out.
..Not enough resistance to punch a hole.