lostonearth35 wrote:
it sounds like innuendo and I'd be like, "You creepy old pervert!!"
Right. Seems the proper response would be "Sorry, buddy, you'll hafta find somebody else's wood for your hole."
naturalplastic wrote:
Someone on WP talked about a childhood experience somewhere in the American South. The WP person said that his mom was instructing him in how to cross the street, and told him "look up, and then look down". So.. first he looked up to the sky, and then his mom went into gales of laughter because in that locale "up" means left, and "down" means "right".
I've not run across
up and
down being used as specific substitutes for
left and
right, though growing up in the Ozarks, I can imagine using "up" and "down" as directions if the street were slanted on the side of a hill, as the street I grew up on was.
Of course, people in any given city do often refer to "uptown" and "downtown" when actual elevation has nothing to do with it, so "up the street" and "down the street" could vary depending on the person giving the directions.
TheSilentOne wrote:
A couple of years ago, I was in class and we were working on a project in the computer lab and my professor said something like "When you're done, let me know. Just place your hands on your head or something." So I finished and did just that.
It's exactly that sort of thing that helped me develop a sense of humor as an Aspie kid. I often took remarks like that literally, but I learned after a while that even if I understood the remark was not literal, that I'd get a laugh if I pretended that it was.
_________________
"I don't mean to sound bitter, cynical or cruel - but I am, so that's how it comes out." - Bill Hicks