I think The Weather channel had a thing about using onion on frozen windshield. Yep! They did.https://www.nbcnews.com/news/weather/video/fight-winter-using-potatoes-onions-and-other-common-household-items-873431619880
Shakespeare introduced many words for the first time; eyeball, for instance. Here are 20 such words. https://mentalfloss.com/article/48657/20-words-we-owe-william-shakespeare
I can remember some old timers take a tobacco pouch with tobacco in it,soak it in water then rub it on the windshield worked pretty good for a short time.
I did a quick search of “shakespeare chicken coward” which brought up an article from the Independent which claims William Kemp beat out the other William for this honor:
The first example we have of chicken meaning a coward comes in 1600: William Kemp’s Nine Days’ Wonder: “It did him good to have ill words of a hoddy doddy! a hebber de hoy!, a chicken! a squib.”
Shakespeare gets credit for inventing a lot of words or expressions. But, we don’t know that he actually invented them. Shakespeare’s use is the oldest known use of those words. But, he might have heard some of them from others, and decided to use them in his writing.
There appears to be some credible literary research now that throws serious doubt as to Shakespeare being the actual author of his works. He may have just been a ghostwriter for another author.
BTW, the fact that some literate person was the first one to write a word down doesn’t mean that this word was invented by them. Most people couldn’t read and write in olden times anyway.
Templo S.U.D. over 5 years ago
and later on, Shakespeare’s insult caught onto Marty McFly (who really wants to try out the carrot/onion mixture on their windshield these days?)
Gent over 5 years ago
To be or not to be afraid. That is the question. Cluck cluck cluck!
NeedaChuckle Premium Member over 5 years ago
I think The Weather channel had a thing about using onion on frozen windshield. Yep! They did.https://www.nbcnews.com/news/weather/video/fight-winter-using-potatoes-onions-and-other-common-household-items-873431619880
J Short over 5 years ago
Shakespeare introduced many words for the first time; eyeball, for instance. Here are 20 such words. https://mentalfloss.com/article/48657/20-words-we-owe-william-shakespeare
jbrobo Premium Member over 5 years ago
I can remember some old timers take a tobacco pouch with tobacco in it,soak it in water then rub it on the windshield worked pretty good for a short time.
ahem Premium Member over 5 years ago
I did a quick search of “shakespeare chicken coward” which brought up an article from the Independent which claims William Kemp beat out the other William for this honor:
The first example we have of chicken meaning a coward comes in 1600: William Kemp’s Nine Days’ Wonder: “It did him good to have ill words of a hoddy doddy! a hebber de hoy!, a chicken! a squib.”
Nathan Daniels over 5 years ago
Rain’s not all they’ll repel.
Jogger2 over 5 years ago
Shakespeare gets credit for inventing a lot of words or expressions. But, we don’t know that he actually invented them. Shakespeare’s use is the oldest known use of those words. But, he might have heard some of them from others, and decided to use them in his writing.
cdnalor over 5 years ago
I assume old skateboards were first used for skurfing (skate+surf=skurf)?
dv1093 over 5 years ago
There appears to be some credible literary research now that throws serious doubt as to Shakespeare being the actual author of his works. He may have just been a ghostwriter for another author.
Huckleberry Hiroshima over 5 years ago
Well I’ll be.
WCraft Premium Member over 5 years ago
I thought “Needles” invented the term chicken…
craigwestlake over 5 years ago
And the response to his insult was how we got the modern meaning to “Duck!”…
The Pro from Dover over 5 years ago
It wasn’t Shakespeare it was Bacon who coined the phrase chicken.
Spock over 5 years ago
And who was the first one to refer to a coward as a coward?
Spock over 5 years ago
Most sayings attributed to some very famous person were in fact coined by a less famous person.
Spock over 5 years ago
BTW, the fact that some literate person was the first one to write a word down doesn’t mean that this word was invented by them. Most people couldn’t read and write in olden times anyway.