Iliff-King phrasebook Iliff-King phrasebook Iliff-King phrasebook

subscribe
×

Enter your email address to receive an email notification of new entries to the phrasebook

You will receive no more than one a day. We will not use your email for any other purpose. Each email will include an unsubscribe link.

Note: You’ll receive a validation link, by email, soon after submitting. The subscription won’t begin until you click it. Please don’t try a spoof email address. It’s your own time you’ll be wasting.

Search resultsClose

definition

<

eyes like pissholes in the snow expression or saying

Deeply sunken and/or dark eyes, often preceived to be a symptom of a hangover

Origin

The phrase possibly derives from a rugby song, which in the 1960-70s meant a crude song intended for the post-match communal bath only.

(These days rugby songs are stirring anthems sung by supporters, and bear no relation to the other kind.)

Collector

Francis – 1960s
Francis King – sibling of Naomi

Notes

1) Popular rugby songs included On the good ship Venus, Eskimo Nell, Roll me over, and Four & twenty virgins. At their height, collections were released as LPs by such artists as The Scrum Halves and The Jock Strapp Ensemble. (Strangely, they were always called Rugby Songs, yet the sport was then commonly called Rugger.)

2) The phrase was used by Michael Caine’s character Jack Carter in the 1971 film Get Carter, but it was well established by then.

3) Dylan Thomas used the similar phrase “eyes like rissoles in the sand” when describing impressions of USA in the 1950s

See also

peepy-eyed

Submitted: 20/10/2024 by Mark ● Last updated: 21/10/2024 12:07 by Mark

any thoughts?

Comments are reviewed before publication for taste and relevance. Spam is not published (even if you’re the waste of DNA who has tried >1,400 times).





To be notified when your comment is published, enter your email. It will not be published or used for any other purpose without your permission:



/phrase/word.php 1003
1004 1002