who the hell is bob?? bobs not my uncle... why do ppl uses this phrase? i dont get it....
along with.... others.... with names one with ... gordon bennett i think... im not sure..... do you use any phrases that uses a name.... like i put in the title and please put an explanation what it means? thanks. :)
Sweet Fanny Adams
That is quite a tragic one, as many people think it is a play on a popular swear word, often shortened to sweet f a.
In fact Fanny Adams was a daughter of a vicar who was murdered and dismembered in 1867 http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/341000.html
From World War II soldiers in the Pacific, the acronym FUJIYAMA (not quite accurate but a nice play on words) - f you Jack, I am alright (Fujiyama is the highest peak in Japan)
Used to describe a lot of people, from the song Widecombe Fair
"For I want for to go to Widecombe Fair, With Bill Brewer, Jan Stewer, Peter Gurney, Peter Davy, Dan'l Whiddon, Harry Hawke, Old Uncle Tom Cobley and all."
Ethel, i fixed it by going in to system restore, select the restore point which was created prior to the updates being installed. and it started working again...
Anyway...
i heard people saying:
'i cant see JACK all'
any reason why 'Jacks' in it?
It's from the not so distant past when men especially would swear like troopers at work and in the pub with their mates but not at home. It is substitute for f all
"Bob's your uncle" undoubtedly refers to Lord Salisbury and Arthur Balfour [see Ethel's first link]. The objection that the expression didn't appear in print until the 1930s is easily met. Balfour did not die until 1930. It's origin and meaning is clearly libellous. The damages would have been enormous. It is not possible to bring an action for libelling a dead man.