PDA

View Full Version : Familiar Idioms and you...


BlackDrop
2006-04-04, 12:58 PM
"Balls to the Wall"


...is not as dirty as you may believe it to be:

Dating back to the 1950's, this refers to an all-out effort. The phrase originated from an aviation term. On airplanes, the throttle control handles and the fuel mixture are often topped with grips that are ball shaped, thus referring to pilots as "balls." If you push the ball forward close to the front wall of the cockpit your result would be a top speed.

We recieved an email from a site visitor concerning this idiom:
I have never heard the explanation that you gave for balls to the wall and I am a pilot. That doesn't mean it isn't true, but it doesn't sound right. My understanding is that the phrase comes from the automatic speed control for a diesel-generator such as those used on submarines. There is a hydraulic governor, which maintains the diesel at constant speed regardless of the load on the generator. Inside the governor, round counterweights are attached to a vertical drive shaft. The weights (balls) are on hinged arms. As the engine spins, the drive shaft spins and slings the balls outward toward the walls of the governor housing. The faster the engine turns, the closer the balls get to the wall, i.e., engine at high speed, balls to the wall. The ends of the arms opposite the balls were attached to a shaft, which moved a needle valve against or away from its seat, thereby controlling fuel flow. As the engine speed increases (generator load decreasing), the balls move out, forcing the needle into the seat, restricting fuel flow, and slowing the engine back down. Through various springs and other devices, this allows the engine to maintain an almost constant speed as the load on the generator changes.

We recieved an email from another site visitor concerning this idiom:
I am a retired U.S Navy aircrew man who spent 17 years flying on Lockheed P-3 aircraft and the term we used for max speed usually on take off's is balls to the wall. Like the in the first explanation "balls to the wall" the throttles for the four engines have ball shape grips. The pilots will tell the flight engineer to set the throttle for take off, which are balls to the wall. When pushed far forward toward the fire wall is max throttle. "Balls to the Wall", is a very old saying in the U.S. Navy P-3 community


I did not know that...anyone else have other idioms?

Ivan
2006-04-04, 01:32 PM
I'm just remembering this off the top of my head.

Son of a gun.

Not sure of the time period, but when sailing was the major way of transportation. Sailors were sometimes allowed to bring their wives with them on the ship. They usually lived below the gun decks of the ship. When a child was born on the ship it was below the gun deck. And in that time being a son of a lowly sailor wasn't usually something to be proud of especially if you were born at sea.

So if you want to call someone a name implying that he was poor or of a lowly class in society you could call someone a "Son of a gun."

Not sure how true or correct that is.

Where do you get you info?

BlackDrop
2006-04-04, 02:04 PM
I googled idioms and a ton of them popped up:

I never knew that about Son of a Gun. Here's yours:

http://72.14.203.104/search?q=cache:2Ksvf42wM7gJ:www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/327900.html+son+of+a+gun&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=3&client=firefox-a

Kikinchikin
2006-04-05, 11:26 PM
I have been wondering where the phrase, "Shit eating grin," came from forever. Why would you be grinning after eating shit? It makes NO SENSE!

Hamma
2006-04-06, 07:51 AM
:lol:

OneManArmy
2006-04-06, 11:24 AM
"dick sucking like an ivan"

I wonder where that.... ;)

Ivan
2006-04-06, 11:25 AM
I can suck a golf ball through a straw.

OneManArmy
2006-04-06, 11:27 AM
without the straw breaking?

Ivan
2006-04-07, 05:13 PM
Another one off the top of my head...

Kicking the Bucket:

Butchers would hang the pig on a beam that was called the bucket by its feet and when butcher would make a slice down the pig's belly as it is still alive it would of course flail and what not "kicking" the beam called the bucked.

So when you said "so-and-so kicked the bucket" it ment they died.

Derfud
2006-04-07, 06:59 PM
I have been wondering where the phrase, "Shit eating grin," came from forever. Why would you be grinning after eating shit? It makes NO SENSE!
<VBSEG>

Hamma
2006-04-07, 10:28 PM
In my vast research there doesen't seem to be any particular source of "Shit eating grin"

This is what Urban Dictionary says:
A grin which someone crazy enough to be eating shit and be deliriously happy about it would have on their face.

I told Jimmy to wipe that shit-eating grin off his face before I smashed it into a pulp.
:lol:

Kikinchikin
2006-04-08, 01:45 AM
An unsolved mystery worthy of the company of Stonehenge and Atlantis.

Hamma
2006-04-08, 10:19 AM
I agree - I am going to the government and asking for a grant to solve this mystery. 500 mill over 2 years should do the trick.