[Klug-general] Virtual Servers

Antonio Mendoza Mendoza agmendozam at yahoo.es
Sat Apr 14 19:18:14 UTC 2012


Thanks you all for the explanations :)
Still got much English to learn... time to time 

Best regards and good weekend you folks
Antonio



________________________________
 De: "alex.layfield at sky.com" <alex.layfield at sky.com>
Para: Kent Linux User Group - General Topics <kent at mailman.lug.org.uk> 
Enviado: Sábado 14 de abril de 2012 12:52
Asunto: Re: [Klug-general] Virtual Servers
 
"Box deluxe", I think is the etymological idea for balls...

Closely related to:

"Box Standard" aka
"Bog Standard"

From Hamley's Toy Store, I believe...

circa... 1935?

Monopoly...?


/A
Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device

-----Original Message-----
From: Mike Evans <mike at tandem.f9.co.uk>
Sender: kent-bounces at mailman.lug.org.uk
Date: Sat, 14 Apr 2012 12:39:48 
To: Antonio Mendoza Mendoza<agmendozam at yahoo.es>; Kent Linux User Group - General Topics<kent at mailman.lug.org.uk>
Reply-To: Kent Linux User Group - General Topics <kent at mailman.lug.org.uk>
Subject: Re: [Klug-general] Virtual Servers
For non-native English speakers:

   "It's the bees knees"

An expression meaning "It's the best, it's exactly the thing you want" 
probably a word play on "It's the business".

   "It's the dog's bollocks"

Is another phrase meaning the same thing and probably originated as a 
street slang version of the first.  These days "The mutt's nuts" is also 
equivalent.

Finally we have the expression:

   "That cuts the mustard"

Yet another, and much older, way of saying more or less the same thing, 
and also of obscure origin.  Possibly originating in the need for a 
particularly sharp blade to cut mustard seed, which is like little 
ball-bearings, or mustard plants, which are tough and string-like.

Mow you're equipped with your basic tool kit of English phrases meaning 
"It's exactly what you want".  What Colin appears to have done is taken 
all three and put them in the blender.  The result was a phrase which 
just about any UK or US native English speaker would understand 
immediately and probably cause a smile.  Meanwhile the rest of the 
English speaking world sees a chasm of doom and misunderstanding opening 
before them.

So you see it is possible to combine bollocks, knees and mustard and end 
up with something that sounds painful but is exactly what you want. 
Whatever turns you on I guess.

Mike


_______________________________________________
Kent mailing list
Kent at mailman.lug.org.uk
https://mailman.lug.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/kent
_______________________________________________
Kent mailing list
Kent at mailman.lug.org.uk
https://mailman.lug.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/kent
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.lug.org.uk/pipermail/kent/attachments/20120414/eeb5ddb1/attachment.htm>


More information about the Kent mailing list