OT: And now for something completely different !!!

It would be fairly difficult to make a getaway carrying one of those.

Nice cape though. Short enough not to get caught in the machinery and long enough to be fashionable. :rolleyes:
 
In the 16th and 17th centuries, everything had to be transported by ship and it was also before commercial fertilizer's invention, so large shipments of manure were common.
It was shipped dry, because in dry form it weighed a lot less than when wet, but once water (at sea) hit it, it not only became heavier, but the process of fermentation began again, of which a by product is methane gas.
As the stuff was stored below decks in bundles you can see what could (and did) happen.
Methane began to build up below decks and the first time someone came below at night with a lantern, BOOOOM!
Several ships were destroyed in this manner before it was determined just what was happening.
After that, the bundles of manure were always stamped with the term "Ship High In Transit" on them which meant for the sailors to stow it high enough off the lower decks so that any water that came into the hold would not touch this volatile cargo and start the production of methane.
Thus evolved the term "S.H.I.T ", (Ship High
In Transport) which has come down through the centuries and is in use to this very day.


You probably did not know the true history of this word.
Neither did I.


And I always thought it was a hunting and fishing term.:D
 
I thought it was invented so that guys could stand around truck beds and say something.

That's my dad's theory anyway.:D
 
There's a song by a folk group called Booted in Boston something along the lines of the Kingston Trio's MTA

( " and they told old Charley he'd need another nickle, Charley couldn't get off of that train. And did he ever return, no he never returned, and his fate is still unlearned, he may ride forever 'neath the street of Boston, he's the man who never returned! " )
 
lol Yvsa, you GOT to have the best daymed BS shovel in the world. Where on earth did you find that story. It wasn't where DannyinJapan finds his "402 big Danny's in Texas" number is it? I take that back, it's so outrageous it MUST be true.:D
 
Originally posted by crooked knife
lol Yvsa, you GOT to have the best daymed BS shovel in the world.

Where on earth did you find that story.

Thanks, Dan gave it to me.:D
Believe it or not I have friends a whole lot more weird in person than the lot that frequents this place.:eek: :rolleyes: :D ;)
One of them just happened to send it to me in an e-mail.:cool:

This was a really, really serious hijack of Kis's thread.:p ;)
 
Hmmm. I think that's an Urban Legend Yvsa, although an interesting one!

From the Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins: "****: From the Indo-European root skei, "to divide," comes the Old English scitan, "to defecate," that is the ancestor of our word ****.

To **** thus means strictly to divide or cut (wastes) from the body. ****, as slang for nonsense or lies, is an Americanism probably first used by soldiers during the Civil War as a shortening of bullshit, another Americanism that probably goes back 30 or more years earlier, though it is first recorded, in the form of the euphemism bull, in about 1850."

regards,

Svashtar
 
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