Venicon,
@Venicon@sopuli.xyz avatar

‘Whits fur ye will no’ go past ye’ - what’s for you will not go past you

My wee Scottish granny had some real wisdom.

‘No point in worrying about somethin cos if it happens ye suffer twice!’

Vaginal_blood_fart,

My parents used these hahhaa. And the classic for when you’ve had enough of someone “go get in the sea”

Piecemakers3Dprints,
@Piecemakers3Dprints@lemmy.world avatar

After reading this comment, I was going to ask what “get tae fook” meant, but then I clocked your username and now I’m not sure that’s so wise.

Vaginal_blood_fart,

Hahaha. Yeah. That means basically fuck off, get fucked.

explodIng_lIme,

“You may have descended from monkeys but not me” from my grandma. She was a stubborn woman who had a hard time adjusting to the idea of evolution. I’m mostly atheist but I still get a kick out of this one

juliebean,

that’s pretty funny, but, adjusting to the idea? unless you’re hella old, evolution was probably an old idea by the time your grandma was born lol

ooklamok,

Judas Priest

LetKCater2U,

My grandfather would say “Is your daddy a glassmaker?” And when we’d inevitably say no, “Then get from in front the tv!” Meaning we were in his way, as children tend to be lol. Me and husband use this all the time with each other.

NoDoy,
@NoDoy@lemmy.ml avatar

Not a phrase that my grandmother said, but one I said to her.

“Hey, Granny. I have a doozy for you.”

Backstory:

My grandmother took pride in her Scrabble prowess. I spent a lot of summers growing up with her and she would always play cards, dominoes, or Scrabble with friends. She taught me, my siblings, and cousins all how to play. Thing is that she never took it easy on us, so we always got our butts handed to us when playing her.

Anyhow, I was in my mid 20s at the time and my grandmother was on the verge of beating me by 50 or so points. I was like whatever until I noticed something on the board. I looked at her, looked at the board, and looked at her again. I glared squarely in her eyes and said, “Granny, I have a doozy for you.” Then I proceeded to put my tiles on the board with the word “doozy” landing on a triple word score and the “z” landing on a double letter score. An instant 84 points I think it was.

The way she looked at me was priceless. She looked at me like I stood up on the table, squatted, and took a dump on the board. I blew her butt out the water. She was not pleased. The funny thing was that she had the nerve to challenge the spelling on the off chance that it was “doozie” (which is an alternate spelling), so she lost her next turn on top of everything.

We never played again, but she was willing to take the joke in hand whenever I mentioned it… which was often. A year or so after that she passed after a couple of strokes.

Sorry if this is tldr. I tell this story once every few years or so to a friend, not for them, but to remind myself of her cause I really miss her A LOT. I haven’t told anyone in a while.

So basically whenever I hear the word “doozy” in a sentence, I think of her and smile.

datendefekt,
@datendefekt@lemmy.ml avatar

“Getting old’s not for pussies” - my Grandma

biscuitsofdeath,

Take me out back and shoot me.

CrabAndBroom,

When he was talking about turning 100: “I can’t see, and I can’t hear, but I can still eat so I’m not going to die.”

He did indeed make it to 100.

muffedtrims,

My grandpa whenever we scraped our knee or something: “You’ll grow new bark”

Eladarling,

My grandmother said, “The time for tarts are when they’re passing.” She meant “take what’s offered when its offered,” but I want it printed on the programs at my funeral

AwwTopsy,

Whenever I got hurt, my grandmother would say “It’ll get better before you’re married!” I use that to this day with my nieces and nephews, who are not amused.

datendefekt,
@datendefekt@lemmy.ml avatar

Was/is she German? Sounds like a German thing.

AwwTopsy,

Nope, Polish!

protput,

It probably doesn’t translate very well. But my grandfather always said something like “If you don’t behave I’ll put your head between your two ears” and us kids would always giggle and say that it was already the case. I also often use that phrase now.

bunkyprewster,

A whistling woman or a whistling hen, will drive the devil from his den.

(My wife’s grandfather, not mine.)

iviattendurefort,

A blind man would be happy to see that. (About a task completed poorly on a jobsite)

pseudo,
@pseudo@jlai.lu avatar

They is also “better hear that than being deaf” after hearing something ridiculous.

shinigamiookamiryuu,

“Never fear the sea, fear the storm.”

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