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softly, softly ctachy monkey

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Scouse Kenny | 12:03 Wed 03rd Dec 2003 | Phrases & Sayings
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Where on earth does the saying 'Softly, softly catchy Monkey' come from and what EXACTLY does it refer to? What's the best, or right, time to use the expression?
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question 37396 was asked a couple of weeks ago. Is the AB search facility on the blink again?
It's usually written as 'softly, softly catchee monkey' as if someone, perhaps Chinese, is speaking pidgin English. It first appeared in print in a book of quotations published in 1907. It is just a proverbial phrase recommending caution and the gentle approach as the best way to achieve an objective.

The time to use it is when someone - perhaps younger and/or more hot-headed than yourself - is recommending the immediate, slapdash approach to a problem. Then is when you say: "Softly, softly catchee monkey."

(Bob, I tried your link and my screen just 'hung up'...whether AnswerBank's problem or my computer's I don't know. I suspect one of the answers it would have revealed for the questioner would have been the one I've repeated above, anyway, so I hope you don't mind.)

I always that that it was supposed to be written/said - "sof'ly, sof'ly'??
Not one of the seven illustrations of the phrase offered by The Oxford English Dictionary omits the 't' of 'softly', Janet, so I imagine that doing so is a regional/dialect thing.
Probably to do with some region of my brain. I seem to recall a detective series on TV called "Sof'ly Sof'ly"... (probably too old for anyone else to remember).
Janet, Charlie Barlow, played by Stratford Johns, started his career on 'Softly Softly' - after 'Z Cars' - in 1966, according to the website the link will take you to if you click http://www.televisionheaven.co.uk/zcars.htm Both the 'Softlies' have letters 't' in them.

Regarding age, let me just say I was 29 at the time. I am certainly not expecting you - a lady, one presumes - to offer similar information!

I must have some odd blank regarding the letter "t". I was a mere babe in arms watching that and Maigret, etc. I am in my forties.

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