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FredPuli | 14:05 Mon 24th Nov 2003 | Phrases & Sayings
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What is the origin of ' One sandwich short of a picnic' for someone mentally deficient or somewhat mad?
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In the 1920s, a whole raft of phrases appeared to describe someone/thing as 'excellent'...the bee's knees, the monkey's eyebrows, the cat's whiskers etc. I have no idea which appeared first, but - once one had caught the public's imagination, dozens were coined.

The same applies to phrases relating to stupidity...one sandwich short of a picnic, one can short of a six-pack, one clown short of a circus and so on. They're all just manifestations of people trying to outdo each other with imaginative ways of expressing a common thought. I doubt whether there is much hope of isolating the origin of any single one of them.

oh but i'm sure if anyone could do it, you could Quiz.
Thanks for your confidence in me, Roxy! Thought I'd do one, just for you..."the bee's knees", meaning "excellent", first appeared in print in the USA in 1923 in a publication by H C Witwer called 'Fighting Blood'. I believe the "one short of a..." phrases are all much more recent.
one score draw short of a full classified roundup - best one i ever heard
He/She is one clown short of a circus ----only using one chopstick---knitting with one needle

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