Difference between revisions of "Nayther bag nor bug"
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* '''big''' | * '''big''' | ||
− | * ''''' | + | * '''beag:''' (''Irish'') small |
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+ | * '''bug:''' an insect → [[scotcher grey]] |
Latest revision as of 03:14, 19 December 2006
- The Grand Old Duke of York: (nursery rhyme) "The grand old Duke of York,/ He had ten-thousand men./ He marched them up to the top of the hill,/ And he marched them down again./ And when they were up, they were up;/ And when they were down, they were down;/ But when they were only halfway up,/ They were neither up nor down" → according to some accounts, the rhyme refers to Prince Frederick, Duke of York and Albany, whose military service took place during the Napoleonic Wars
- neither big nor small → if Shaun is Big Napoleon and Shem is Little Napoleon, then Shem-Shaun is the "Petty Napoleon who is neither big nor small"
- big
- beag: (Irish) small
- bug: an insect → scotcher grey