
So can anyone help me out with this

DON'T TRY TO TEACH YOUR GRANDMA TO SUCK EGGS - I don't think anyone knows exactly how this phrase got started. On a farm, an egg-sucking dog (a dog that steals eggs and eats them) is bad. And I think that during one discussion of the phrase, it was said that maybe grandma didn't have teeth so she sucked soft boiled eggs. Anyway, here's what Charles Earle Funk says in "Hog on Ice" (Harper & Row, New York, 1948). "To teach one's grandmother to suck eggs - To offer needless assistance; to waste one's efforts upon futile matters; especially, to offer advice to an expert. This particular expression is well over two hundred years old; it is just a variation of an older theme that was absurd enough to appeal to the popular fancy. One of the earliest of these is given in Udall's translation of 'Apophthegmes (1542) from the works of Erasmus. It reads: 'A swyne to teach Minerua, was a prouerbe, for which we sai: Englyshe to teach our dame to spyne.'" That last bit was about an expression, don't try to teach a dame to spin.
Quote by 19manchester
dnt no, but where did "DON'T RUB UR DAD UP THE WRONG WAY" come from? is there a right ay 2 rub ur dad up? :shock:
Rub up the wrong way - irritate (person) by tactless handling As a cat arches
its back, normally a sign of roused feelings, if it is stroked against the lie of its fur.
Quote by Sgt Bilko
Right, whilst we are on the subject, have you heard the expression "Like Piffy on a rock!" ??
If so, where does it come from???:? :? :?
I know how it is used, but have no idea where it comes from!!!:dunno: :dunno:
Quote by DeeCee
without trying to split hairs................................the phrase i know (and love) is "like piffy on a rock...BUN"