Monthly Archives: April 2009

First win – finally!

Sincere thanks for the $50 cheque received for my Big Cash entry. What self-funded retiree wouldn’t be pleased to receive such a nice surprise in the mail during difficult financial times?  This is my first win although I photocopy my entries each month and check the answers when published.

I have been “puzzling” for several [more…]

Clerihews

Trish Parnell
Thinks she’s swell
She’s a thinker
But can’t do Stinker

Trish Parnell
Whakatane, NZ

Christine’s crosswords bring joy to me
I pounce upon them with cries of glee.
But Lovatt’s Logic – do I care
Who gets what, or when or where?

Meg Dillon
Margate, Qld

Oh Ali you are a funny ‘un,
With your cross-words as you’re doing ‘um
Can’t find the word, so expletives [more…]

Joern Utzon

Danish architect, Joern Utzon,  probably one of the most accomplished architects in the world, never saw his finest achievement – the magnificent Sydney Opera House.

Utzon’s submission was selected from amongst 230 others competing in a worldwide competition run by the NSW State Government to design an opera house.

Construction began in 1959 but it soon became [more…]

Frog in your throat

Although it is hard to believe now, at one time, medieval physicians believed that the secretions of a frog could cure a cough if they were coated on the throat of the patient.

That in itself sounds repulsive, but what makes the idea even worse is the application of the secretions.

Instead of painting the treatment [more…]

God bless you!

You’ve said it yourself – someone sneezes and you say, “God Bless You”, but do you know why?

There are several explanations for this saying which has become second-nature to so many.

Some say that during the sixth century it was a congratulatory statement as a sneeze was thought to expel evil spirits.

Some cultures believed that [more…]

Big

Big is one of the mystery words of English etymology, extremely common but of highly dubious origin.
In its earliest use in English it meant ‘powerful’ or ‘strong’ and it was not until the 16th century that it took on the meaning of ‘large’.
It occurred originally in northern English texts, only slowly spreading south, [more…]

An even break

W C Fields famous utterance, ‘Never give a sucker an even break’ has its origins at the dog race track.

Dog owners, betting on the speed of their hounds when chasing the hare, had to make sure they started at exactly the same time, that they had an even break.

Even break came to refer to [more…]

Beyond the pale

If someone’s behaviour is described as being beyond the pale, it is deemed unacceptable – they have overstepped the mark of good manners or decency.

A pale was a wooden stake (think of palings) and the word extended its meaning to ‘an enclosed area’ or ‘an area designated to a particular authority’, such as a [more…]

Bedlam

Bedlam is a state of chaos or uproar but its original meaning was an insane asylum.

Bedlam is derived from the word Bethlehem as taken from the Hospital of St Mary of Bethlehem located outside Bishopsgate, in the City of London. The hospital was established in approximately 1330 as an attachment to the priory, established [more…]