Crosswords0 min ago
Like a bulldog chewing a wasp
26 Answers
My b/friend just described someone as"she's got a face like a bulldog chewing a wasp", while never having heard this expression I wondered its' origin?
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The phrase definitely seems to have its origins in the UK (which, given that the Bulldog is regarded as a British breed, is unsurprising) but its exact origins seem to be unknown. One website says that it's Scottish but I favour the one which claims the phrase for Lancashire.
It's probably just something which one (unrecorded) person thought of and then his mates, liking the phrase, copied - so that it eventually spread throughout the UK.
Chris
It's probably just something which one (unrecorded) person thought of and then his mates, liking the phrase, copied - so that it eventually spread throughout the UK.
Chris
Eddie might well be correct. (Perhaps that's why I thought the phrase might belong to Lancashire?).
The Daily Mail credits Les Dawson with using the phrase:
http://www.dailymail....ease-life-online.html
Chris
The Daily Mail credits Les Dawson with using the phrase:
http://www.dailymail....ease-life-online.html
Chris
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Your response to Les Dawson impressions is better than Les Dawson's then, Toni ;-)
I once met a guy who taught LD's kids. When Les walked through the door at a parents' evening, the teacher couldn't resist greeting him with an impression of himself (as in the Cissy & Ada sketches with Roy Barraclough). Mr Dawson didn't say a word. He simply turned round, walked out of the door and was never seen on the school premises again.
I once met a guy who taught LD's kids. When Les walked through the door at a parents' evening, the teacher couldn't resist greeting him with an impression of himself (as in the Cissy & Ada sketches with Roy Barraclough). Mr Dawson didn't say a word. He simply turned round, walked out of the door and was never seen on the school premises again.