cat : bag :: dish : ?
Oct. 16th, 2005 01:01 pmThat is, if one has some dish, as in "dish the dirt," that one has been heretofore mum about, and one shares it, that's letting the cat out of the bag (as the expression goes), or, in parallel metaphor, letting/getting the dish out of the what? the cabinet? the oven? I guess if we're dishing dirt as in serving portions of it up to people, the cabinet might be the answer. But if it's been baking, it could be dish (or a dish) just out of the oven---a dish heretofore uncovered (untold) OR covered (up), depending how you look at it, so covered dish or uncovered dish, maybe in some funny 9"-by-13" casserole carrying basket... ? Fresh hot dish, sufficiently baked or at least out of the oven now, so there for diners, ready or not?
I dunno---I think maybe the serving up of portions in clean dishes out of the hutch works better. Have an opinion?
[Poll #591635]
I dunno---I think maybe the serving up of portions in clean dishes out of the hutch works better. Have an opinion?
[Poll #591635]
no subject
Date: Oct. 16th, 2005 05:55 pm (UTC)Why do I feel the desire to expound on this at such length? I don't know, but if you feel that ranting excessively on figures of speech might indicate a character flaw to someone who has power over me, then you've got the dirt on me, and might want to dish the dirt to that person in power if you were of a malevolent mind.
no subject
Date: Oct. 16th, 2005 06:22 pm (UTC)Wait- what?
no subject
Date: Oct. 17th, 2005 01:51 am (UTC)Gettin' real dirty
The queen is in the counting house
Acting real flirty
no subject
Date: Oct. 17th, 2005 01:50 am (UTC)Hearing the word "dish" in my head over and over again makes for a funny effect. One dish, two dish, red dish, blue dish; I dish, you dish, we all dish for dished dish.
I like that you seem to assume I am not of malevolent mind. I like to think I'm not, too, as you might imagine.
no subject
Date: Oct. 17th, 2005 02:35 am (UTC)Two dish
Red dish
Blue dish
This one has a little star
This one has a little car
My what a lot of dish there are.
I'm thinking that there is a regional difference in usage for this expression. I've never heard of anyone having the dish on someone or having some dish on anyone. I've always heard of having the dirt or some dirt on a person, and "dish" only came into play as a verb describing what you did with the dirt.
Hmmm.
no subject
Date: Oct. 17th, 2005 02:19 pm (UTC)