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Re: And now for something slightly different.
Posted By: Mousie, on host 199.107.4.10
Date: Wednesday, November 17, 1999, at 17:58:29
In Reply To: Re: And now for something slightly different. posted by Howard on Wednesday, November 17, 1999, at 16:07:43:

> > > > > Did you ever notice how many different ways you can say that something is easy?
> > > > > Duck soup.
> > > > > Piece of cake.
> > > > > No sweat.
> > > > > No problem.
> > > > > Like falling off a log.
> > > > > How"ez"ard
> > >
> > > Goes down smooth as cherry cream pie.
> > > Like taking candy from a baby.
> > > Like water sliding off a duck's back.
> > > No problemo.
> > > Shooting a Shirley Temple.
> > > Taking a spoonful of sugar (although you'd probably use that to mix a Mary Poppins instead :-).
> > >
> > > Is "sucking an egg" considered an easy task, or is that something only used in conjunction with the phrase "You'd teach your grandmother to suck eggs"?
> > >
> > >
> > > > Easy as pie.
> > > >
> > > > Nyper"3.1425..."old
> > >
> > > Small, trivial clarification: it's closer to 3.xy1z rounded... That counts as 5 digits total, not 4 decimal places by the way, and I'm writing it like that so I don't screw up Sam's survey results.
> > >
> > > Wolf "Someone please explain the origin of 'Duck Soup' and why that would be easy to make or eat" spirit
> >
> > Thanks, I was going to ask about that.
> >
> > The only "Duck Soup" I know of is by the 4 Marx Brothers, which is what I first thought of when I saw it in this thread. That might be a red herring, though.
> >
> > Nyper"22/7"old
> Now let me see. A red herring is something that is not what it at first appears to be, right?
> So why do they call it a red herring?
> Howard

Try this:


Link: Red Herring Explanation

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