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Category: Uncategorized
Episode 15 – Mash-Up
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Episode 14 – Computers
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Episode 13 – Cookies
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Episode 12 – Kids
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Episode 11 – The Weather
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Curious Words of the Week – It’s Raining Cats & Dogs
From http://www.phrases.org.uk
One supposed origin is that the phrase derives from mythology. Dogs and wolves were attendants to Odin, the god of storms, and sailors associated them with rain. Witches, who often took the form of their familiars – cats, are supposed to have ridden the wind. Well, some evidence would be nice. There doesn’t appear to be any to support this notion.
It has also been suggested that cats and dogs were washed from roofs during heavy weather. This is a widely repeated tale. It got a new lease of life with the e-mail message “Life in the 1500s”, which began circulating on the Internet in 1999. Here’s the relevant part of that:
I’ll describe their houses a little. You’ve heard of thatch roofs, well that’s all they were. Thick straw, piled high, with no wood underneath. They were the only place for the little animals to get warm. So all the pets; dogs, cats and other small animals, mice, rats, bugs, all lived in the roof. When it rained it became slippery so sometimes the animals would slip and fall off the roof. Thus the saying, “it’s raining cats and dogs.”
This is nonsense of course. It hardly needs debunking but, lest there be any doubt, let’s do that anyway. In order to believe this tale we would have to accept that dogs lived in thatched roofs, which, of course, they didn’t. Even accepting that bizarre idea, for dogs to have slipped off when it rained they would have needed to be sitting on the outside of the thatch – hardly the place an animal would head for as shelter in bad weather.
Another suggestion is that ‘raining cats and dogs’ comes from a version of the French word ‘catadoupe’, meaning waterfall. Again, no evidence. If the phrase were just ‘raining cats’, or even if there also existed a French word ‘dogadoupe’, we might be going somewhere with this one. As there isn’t, let’s pass this by.
There’s a similar phrase originating from the North of England – ‘raining stair-rods’. No one has gone to the effort of speculating that this is from mythic reports of stairs being carried into the air in storms and falling on gullible peasants. It’s just a rather expressive phrase giving a graphic impression of heavy rain – as is ‘raining cats and dogs’.
The much more probable source of ‘raining cats and dogs’ is the prosaic fact that, in the filthy streets of 17th/18th century England, heavy rain would occasionally carry along dead animals and other debris. The animals didn’t fall from the sky, but the sight of dead cats and dogs floating by in storm sewers could well have caused the coining of this colourful phrase. Jonathan Swift described such an event in his satirical poem ‘A Description of a City Shower’, first published in the 1710 collection of the Tatler magazine. The poem was a denunciation of contemporary London society, and its meaning has been much debated. While the poem is metaphorical and doesn’t describe a specific flood, it seems that, in describing water-borne animal corpses, Swift was referring to an occurrence that his readers would have been well familiar with:
Now in contiguous Drops the Flood comes down,
Threat’ning with Deluge this devoted Town.
Now from all Parts the swelling Kennels flow,
And bear their Trophies with them as they go:Filth of all Hues and Odours seem to tell
What Street they sail’d from, by their Sight and Smell.
They, as each Torrent drives, with rapid Force,
From Smithfield or St. Pulchre’s shape their Course,And in huge Confluent join’d at Snow-Hill Ridge,
Fall from the Conduit, prone to Holbourn-Bridge.
Sweeping from Butchers Stalls, Dung, Guts, and Blood,
Drown’d Puppies, stinking Sprats, all drench’d in Mud,
Dead Cats and Turnip-Tops come tumbling down the Flood.
(EWWWWWWWW)
Episode 10 – Work & Bosses
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Episode 9 – Back to School
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Episode 8 – Flying
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Episode 7 – At the Movies
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Episode 6 – Dog Days of Summer
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Episode 5 – Odd Ohio
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Episode 4 – Sports
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Episode 3 – Food
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Episode 2 – Toys
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I asked Joe “What was your favorite toy growing up?” Ok, that makes a big assumption that he has, in fact, grown up. I think his goal is to NOT reach that goal. That’s what makes him a great co-host.
We had fun playing with this topic. In every episode, we feature a list from www.Top5.com. I am a contributor to this web-based humor site, and I moderate a “Little Fiver” list about relationships. You can get a Top5 List in your email weekly. Here’s one that we used in this show:
The Top 16 Possibly Dangerous Toys
16 My Lil’ Pet Shop Neuter ‘n’ Spay Kit
15 Sedentary Sam Inaction Figure
14 General Electric’s Bathtub Adventure Kit
13 Easy Bake Tanning Bed
12 Waterford Crystal Pinata
11 Backyard Bungee!
10 Easy Bake Yellowcake Refiner Oven, Centrifuge and Cooling Tower
9 Rhoda the Exploda Doll
8 Tuff Girlz Razor-Wire Jump Rope
7 Little Kobayashi’s Competitive Speed-Eating Training Kit
6 Pyrograph
5 Sicken Me Elmo Biowaste Adventure Set
4 Jaggedy Ann
3 Grungy Grungy Hippos
2 Rooftop Rangers’ My First Parachute
And the number 1 Possibly Dangerous Toy…
1 Mr. Grenade-o Head