Posted on Leave a comment

every which way

Word:

Function: adverb
Etymology: probably by folk etymology from Middle English everich way every way
Date: 1824
1 : in every direction
2 : in a disorderly manner : irregularly

For example, "How do you get thing done? The papers on your desk are scattered every which way."

Every which way idiom
In all directions, as in Papers were blowing every which way. [Colloquial; mid-1800s]

Movie:

Every Which Way But Loose (1978)  Directed by James Fargo. With Clint Eastwood, Sondra Locke, Geoffrey Lewis.

Title origin:
The film’s title refers to the eponymous Eddie Rabbit song from the soundtrack, in which the singer complains that his girlfriend turns him "every which way but loose", i. e. he cannot bring himself to leave her although he is more of a freewheeling character. The film title is also out of the 1937 novel Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston where the main character Janie’s husband Tea Cake tells her about a fight he had with a man who had a knife, where in the fight Tea Cake "turned him every way but loose", i.e. fought him but did not let the man stab him.

 

Posted on Leave a comment

toi-toi-toi

toi-toi-toi: (an old European custom translated into words to wish you good luck). Saying toi (pronounce: toy) THREE times is derived from the custom of spitting three times over someone's shoulder for good luck. I guess it is easier to say toi-toi-toi than to actually spit. 


Posted on Leave a comment

beg, borrow or steal

Meaning: to do anything to get something. For example, "I would beg, borrow or steal that song because I love music so much."