sid: (Metropolis clock)
[personal profile] sid
As the days of analog timepieces fade into history, will the directions "Turn clockwise to tighten" soon lose all meaning?

Will the expression persist, complete with scholarly footnotes and diagrams?

What could possibly replace it?

Any youngsters out there who can give a current status report?

And, just for fun, what other words or phrases can you think of that belong to the past but live on in the present? (It's late, and all I can think of right now is "Hold your horses!")

(no subject)

Date: Apr. 28th, 2011 05:51 am (UTC)
peoppenheimer: A photo of Paul Oppenheimer at the Australasian Association of Philosophy meeting. (Default)
From: [personal profile] peoppenheimer
lock, stock, and barrel

Here via 3W4DW

Date: Apr. 28th, 2011 08:20 am (UTC)
jest: (kissthecod)
From: [personal profile] jest
Cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey!

Also here via 3W4DW

Date: Apr. 28th, 2011 09:41 am (UTC)
lurkingcat: (Default)
From: [personal profile] lurkingcat
CC doesn't mean what it used to.

(I remember watching my Mum make carbon copies when she was typing things up in the eighties but I haven't seen anyone else do that in decades).

Re: Also here via 3W4DW

Date: Apr. 28th, 2011 03:56 pm (UTC)
shiyiya: Shiyiya, a very pale white girl with brown hair and eyes. (Default)
From: [personal profile] shiyiya
My elementary school had a bunch of carbon paper that I suspect had been discarded from someone's office at the after school club! This would be in the late nineties. It was FASCINATING :P

Re: Also here via 3W4DW

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(no subject)

Date: Apr. 28th, 2011 10:14 am (UTC)
chalcopyrite: Two little folded-paper boats in the rain (Default)
From: [personal profile] chalcopyrite
Prompted by your horse-holding -- "Giving [X] free rein."

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Date: Apr. 28th, 2011 12:13 pm (UTC)
codeman38: Osaka from Azumanga Daioh questioning whether Apple's 'think different' slogan should be 'differently'. (think different)
From: [personal profile] codeman38
I've already seen that one folk-etymologized into "free reign" on several occasions. (And the misinterpretation makes just as much sense, honestly!)

(here via [personal profile] trouble)

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jjhunter: Watercolor of daisy with blue dots zooming around it like Bohr model electrons (Default)
From: [personal profile] jjhunter
I SEE THAT METROPOLIS ICON THERE.

<3

As to your actual question, I know it took years for me to figure out 'a stitch in time' (I kept mistakenly associating it with A Wrinkle In Time), which is one I can imagine fading out of use for certain classes of people as high-end clothes transition to nano- and other seamless material. (Now that I'm independent, of course, I'm only all too aware that yes, a stitch in time does save nine, so grab those threads and needles stat.)

Some other ones...(cheats and looks at Wikipedia to get the exact phrasings); as is with the one above, there certain assumptions re: culture and privilege in terms of whether the saying in question still might have some experiential teeth.

  • Take it with a grain of salt.
  • All frills and no knickers.
  • Born with a silver spoon in his mouth.
  • A candle that burns twice as bright burns half as long
  • To burn the candle at both ends.
  • Don't have too many irons in the fire.
  • Strike while the iron is hot.
  • Never look a gift horse in the mouth.
  • Don't put the cart before the horse.
  • Don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. [BOMBS AWAY!]
  • For want of a nail the shoe is lost, for want of a shoe the horse is lost, for want of a horse the rider is lost.
  • Good wine needs no bush. [Thank you As You Like It]
  • Not enough room to swing a cat [one hopes this is anachronistic]
  • There's more than one way to skin a cat. [as mentioned previously...]
dorothean: detail of painting of Gandalf, Frodo, and Gimli at the Gates of Moria, trying to figure out how to open them (Default)
From: [personal profile] dorothean
I've heard that swinging a cat means swinging a cat o' nine tails, not a feline, which is bad in its own way I suppose!

(no subject)

Date: Apr. 28th, 2011 11:09 am (UTC)
princessofgeeks: (Default)
From: [personal profile] princessofgeeks
dialing a phone, dial tone

typing. my kids learn keyboarding, which is.... wrong.




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Date: Apr. 28th, 2011 11:37 am (UTC)
cxcvi: Red cubes, sitting on a reflective surface, with a white background (Default)
From: [personal profile] cxcvi
And along with that, the reasons of why we have the QWERTY layout will also probably be lost. The layout itself, however, will probably remain, unless someone really successful does something about it with the default layout of one of their products...

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Date: Apr. 28th, 2011 12:29 pm (UTC)
codeman38: Osaka from Azumanga Daioh questioning whether Apple's 'think different' slogan should be 'differently'. (think different)
From: [personal profile] codeman38
On the "dial" note... I remember seeing some badly translated instructions once-- can't remember specifically what for, but it was some sort of electronic device made in China-- where the term "stir" was used to refer to dialing a number. (Google confirms the commonness of this mistranslation.) Thing is, that actually makes perfect sense when you think about the context of an old-fashioned phone dial-- and yet, it just sounds so weird.

(no subject)

Date: Apr. 28th, 2011 12:19 pm (UTC)
jazzfish: Jazz Fish: beret, sunglasses, saxophone (Default)
From: [personal profile] jazzfish
I've been waiting for analog clocks to fade into history since I read that line in Hitchhiker's Guide about how earthlings "still think digital watches are a pretty neat idea." No sign of it happening anytime soon: the low-end ones are cheaper than digital clocks, and the high-end ones are classier than any digital clock you can think of.

One 'phrase' that's teetering on the brink of irrelevance: "YOU SPIN ME RIGHT ROUND BABY RIGHT ROUND, LIKE A... wtf is a record anyway?"

Heh.

Date: Apr. 28th, 2011 05:43 pm (UTC)
onyxlynx: Winged Duesenberg hood ornament (1920)
From: [personal profile] onyxlynx
Speaking of which, what will replace the ancient riposte to the verbose: "Were you vaccinated with a phonograph needle?"

(The sheer number of explanatory footnotes for any Stephen King novel will be epic!)

There was apparently a major push for analog because it was felt (presumably by the usual cabal of conservatives) that digital was just too exact. (I own a pocket watch now (analog with Roman numerals) for when I can't use the phone--and there's another--and got into the digital conversation. Also the clockwise and the Roman numeral conversation, because people apparently only see those in movie copyright notices. Ha.) Hmmm. Just realized that the phrase "My hat's off to you!" is ineffective when almost no one neither Hasidic nor Amish actually wears a hat anymore.

Re: Heh.

From: [personal profile] lilacsigil - Date: Apr. 29th, 2011 03:25 am (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

Date: Apr. 28th, 2011 08:21 pm (UTC)
archersangel: (insane)
From: [personal profile] archersangel
on TV they used to say "don't touch that dial" to get you to keep watching. or even "stay tuned." and to get you to watch next week they tell you to "tune in next week." same bat time, same bat channel.

(no subject)

Date: Apr. 29th, 2011 07:09 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] catspaw
I reckon it'll probably persist with no thougt to its meaning, and eventually turn up as a question on QI ;-)

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From: [personal profile] catspaw - Date: Apr. 29th, 2011 08:01 pm (UTC) - Expand

Clockwise

From: [personal profile] wilson_dizard - Date: Jan. 9th, 2013 12:01 pm (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

Date: May. 6th, 2011 05:04 am (UTC)
butterflydreaming: a few crafts that I made as gifts (Get Excited Make Things)
From: [personal profile] butterflydreaming
Speaking of trailers, movie trailers (aka previews) come before the movie now.

With so many devices going to a touch screen or being motion sensitive (like lights, faucets, and XBox Kinect), will "pushing your buttons" become as anachronistic as the Mix Tape?

Obsolete phrases

Date: Jan. 9th, 2013 11:43 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] wilson_dizard
The passing of some technologies, or the geographic shift of some industries, also leaves behind traces in economic statistics, as well as in the language.

For example, US statistics about industrial production and exports, which are classified into four-digit Standard Industrial Classification Codes, formerly had dozens of categories for various kinds of shoe machinery. By the same token, the statistics that tracked employment trends assigned tracked all kinds of worker skills related to shoe manufacturing.

About 30 years ago, when the US shoe industry sailed offshore and the computer industry took off, a reform of the SIC codes took place to accommodate the changes. In 1997, statisticians, rolled out a more detailed six-digit North American Industry Classification System.

To give an example of two phrases that you still might hear, "a flash in the pan" and "hanging fire" both refer to malfunctions of muzzle-loading firearms. Though in fact, the hobbyists who build and use those muskets might still experience, and definitely understand, those events.

One bizarre regional term sometimes heard in England is "dropping a clanger." It refers to a bygone cooking recipe or meal practice in which a farm cook would prepare pastries filled with meat at one end and jam at the other. The field worker would eat the meat-filled part first, and then the jam-filled part for dessert. Dropping this clanger before lunch would mix up the two parts; and probably break the pastry as well, resulting in an unappetizing mess. Hence, "dropping a clanger" as a mistake.
Edited Date: Jan. 9th, 2013 11:44 am (UTC)

(no subject)

Date: Jan. 10th, 2013 04:59 pm (UTC)
alltoseek: (Default)
From: [personal profile] alltoseek
Ha ha - now you get more new comments to this old post! :D

I was just thinking about the 'gift horse' one yesterday, but someone already mentioned it.

All those nauticalisms - so many I didn't even know they were nauticalisms! So they are already obsolete but persistent:

*Don't sweat the small stuff
*The devil to pay and no pitch hot
*Between the devil and the deep blue sea
*The bitter end

I'm sure there's lots more; that's just top of head.

For clockwise: You know, I filled the house with analog clocks just to make sure my kids would learn to tell time on analog as well as digital (didn't have to worry too much, the school still teaches time-telling on analog).

But clockwise and counter-clockwise will still persist in anything that turns, like screws and jar lids. I can't see us replacing the term; I bet we'll continue to say clockwise, even if the term gets corrupted and shortened along the way.

Also bet we hang onto analog displays, even if they are driven digitally! :D

(no subject)

Date: Jan. 19th, 2013 03:38 am (UTC)
alltoseek: (Default)
From: [personal profile] alltoseek
Widdershins! I knew I'd come up with it. Predates clock faces. Now archaic, but maybe it will be revived once clock faces are archaic *g*

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