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sweating 'cobs'

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crisgal | 20:18 Mon 17th Sep 2012 | Phrases & Sayings
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why do we say that?
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Cassell's Slang Dict. gives

"sweat cobs" - to perspire heavily; where cob = a rounded lump. No derivation is given but suggests a link to "have a cob on"
Never heard that one before - guess it's from "down south"?
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no maggiebee, i'm 'oop north, by 'eck!
So doesn't everyone say it then?
Normal people (ie, us up north) do aye crisgal :-)
It definitely goes as far south as Brum as my OH says it. I'd never heard it before I met him, though, so maybe it's not used much further south than that.
Quite a common saying, in my neck of the woods West Mids.
Common saying in West Yorkshire, probably dying out with my parents generation now tho.
One lunchtime in my local, on the south coast, a couple - from Derbyshire - came in looking for a light lunch. They asked the barman if the pub did cobs, to which he replied, "What's a cob?" For them, it was a small round loaf or bun, but he had clearly never heard of it, so it may well have spread north, but it seems not to have spread south!
I meant to add above that, in terms of sweat, the rounded idea still applies...ie positive 'beads' of sweat trickling down rather than just general dampness.
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yes, a cob is a round crusty loaf up here.
Same here crisgal, but there is a type of horse if I remember correctly called a cob.
Yes, there is, Tony. And the first time I heard OH say he was sweating cobs, I thought he meant he was sweating like a horse!
Kiki, a cob is a short-legged, stout breed of horse...ie it's pretty 'rounded'!
The word has been used in many contexts where roundness is generally significant, a fruit-stone, a chignon in a woman's hair, a lump of coal and many others...even a testicle!
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'Sweating conkers' is also common in W Yorks
I'm a softy southerner and have heard that term. Maybe Wiki or Urban dictionary will hold the answer....

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