ChatterBank1 min ago
Chinny chin chin
10 Answers
In the 80's to stroke ones chin whilst grimacing a bit meant "i don't believe a word of what i'm hearing" - to further enhance feeling behind the movement "jimmy hill" was sometime muttered... Whats that all about then?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.if you go and look here http://www.jimmyhill.co.uk/ you will see that Jimmy has quite a pronounced chin. For years he camouflaged it with a short beard... I have never heard the grimace and chin stroke ascribed any meaning though
In body-language terms, stroking the chin is generally believed to represent doubt or decision-making. Accompanied by a grimace, it presumably meant: "I have my doubts about what you're saying!"
Re the 'Jimmy Hill', I wonder whether this might just have been a British version of the American phrase, 'Sam Hill', as in 'What in the Sam Hill are you talking about?" There, clearly, it is a euphemisn for 'hell'. So, might the chin-stroking grimacer have meant "The hell you did!", as it were?
we used to do Jimmy Hill, chinny reck-on, not by the hair of my chinny-chin-chin, tutankahmun (pronounced toot-un-car-moooooooooon) & moochy-moochy (no idea where we got that one from though).
I always thought it was because of the body-language explanation provided by Quizmonster and the Jimmy Hill thing started simply cos of the size of his chin.
well I'm glad there are others who remember the "itchy chin" response to an argument. QM thanks for the post once again you are the light of reason shining on the distorted recollections of phrases and saying passed and present... oh and thanks stoo_pid for reminding me of all the alterations on a theme (i might start a one man campaign to bring this back into use again)