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Why do some people say...?
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And I think it is more commonly rendered as "ecky thump." Being from God's Own County myself, and therefore a pedant, I really felt the need to point that out!
The Goodies famously used the phrase in a sketch, and it tends to conjure up images of men in flat caps followed around by whippets!
Ecky thump, as demonstrated by The Goodies sometime in the 1970s, was a martial art involving hitting people with black puddings.
The programme was so funny that apparently someone died of laughter watching it.
http://www.snopes.com/horrors/freakish/laughing.asp
I was under the impression that they coined the phrase themselves.
Atoach
The phrase was also used in a sketch in Programme 31 of Month Python's Flying Circus (The Language Laboratory.) This episode was recorded on 24/04/1972 and transmitted 16/11/1972. The Goodies episode 42, titled Kung Fu Kapers, in which Bill Oddie reveals he is a master of the ancient Lancashire martial art of Ecky-Thump, was transmitted 24/03/1975.
Bill Oddie is a Lancastrian by birth and Michael Palin (who played the character in the Python sketch who used the phrase) is a Yorkshireman (Sheffield).
Oh, by the way, atoach,
I wasn't trying to "claim" it for Yorkshire. Many of (well, okay, my only) mate(s) come from Lancashire and (t)he(y) use the phrase just as much as me. i.e. never. As long as they show their passports at the border in Todmorden, I get on paerfectly well with my poor Lancastrian brethren!