ailsagirl
ailsagirl's JournalFrankly...
I don't use the "new" expressions unless I like them. Most of them (IMO) are insipid and meaningless.
The older ones I like because I consider them imaginative and meaningful.
Taking a dim view
Blessing in disguise
A dime a dozen
Taking it as it comes
Call it a day
Benefit of the doubt
Begging the question
Cutting corners
Get out of hand
Pull someone's leg
Pull yourself together
So far so good
Speak of the devil
The last straw
The best of both worlds
ALSO (straight from The Bard-- still used often after ~400 years!)
Heart of gold.
Kill with kindness. ...
Laughing stock. ...
Wild-goose chase. ...
Green-eyed monster. ...
Lie low.
Faint-hearted...
Apple of my eye
Cervantes also coined many phrases we still use-- but I'm in California and my power is going to be cut any minute so I can't elaborate.
California governor slams PG&E, saying 'greed,' 'mismangement' led to widespread power cuts
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2019/10/10/newsom-slams-pge-greed-mismanagement-power-cuts/3937911002/BEAUTIFUL!!
He really excoriated PG&E-- it was great to hear it.
Of all the incredibly marvelous Beatles' songs, which is the best?
IMO, A Day in the Life
Sorry-- something is wrong with the link
If cats and dogs were people: cat friend vs. dog friend
Funny Cats Hate Bad Singing!! (hilarious)
P.S. My cats are oblivious to my bad singing
What Ken Burns replied when asked if he'd make a documentary about dumdum
https://variety.com/video/ken-burns-on-why-he-would-make-a-trump-documentary/Burns is so articulate and so intelligent, yet he's totally down-to-earth and approachable.
I heard him speak last night and was blown away-- best speaker I ever heard!!! Wish we could clone him
I learned of that only recently-- absolutely staggering, isn't it?
They were not schooled in music theory nor did they ever even take music lessons, yet they instinctively knew everything they needed to create the songs they wanted. They didn't know the technical words or concepts yet they utilized them constantly. How is this possible? Pure instinct? Really, I think they actually were "geniuses"-- I hate to use that over-used word but how else to explain it?
Here's an excerpt from Jonathan Gould's book, in which he writes about the song, A Hard Day's Night:
It begins with a musical wake-up call: the harsh clang of a solitary guitar chord that hangs in the air for an elongated moment, its densely-packed notes swimming into focus like eyes adjusting to the light. (Though the song is in the key of G, this opening chord is a D minor 11th, as if a C-major triad were being played over a D-minor triad.) Two bars later, reality rushes in, as John's vocal pickup ("It's been a..." ) is swept up and carried along by a swift current of guitars, bass, drums...The momentum builds through another verse until, with a shout, the singers seem to leap out of the path of Harrison's twelve-string electric guitar and George Martin's piano as they combine on a deep, bluesy run that resolves in a delighted little jig-step of sixteen notes.The singing returns, the middle repeats, and finally, a full three minutes after it began, the song heads wearily for home, the band slowing imperceptibly, until the rhythm falls out and George's twelve-string explodes into the chord that opened the song--arpeggiated this time, its notes distinct and shimmering like stars against the sky.
Wow
Profile Information
Gender: Do not displayHometown: Davis
Home country: US
Current location: Marin
Member since: Sun Aug 1, 2004, 02:35 PM
Number of posts: 22,896