so i’ve got this facebook thingy. . .
So how does this work? I’ve had this facebook page for donkey’s years it seems and only because I needed it to get into the TRAK group. It sucked about an hour of work just making it look lived in and then I never really used it again. Yeah i’ve “connected” with a few other paddlers (well I approve those requests anyway) but we chat in other ways or here. Thing is, I just can’t find a way to make facebook useful. A real frustration to web-geek like me. I’ve got to be totally missing something. . . So. . can anyone tell me what it is about facebook that makes it all the rage?
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It’s basically for those of us who don’t have a life. If you’re living a real life, you’ll probably be disappointed with Facebook. I recommend giving up some of the interesting and fun things you’re presently doing and you’ll see the light the rest of us see…
What’s a “donkey’s years”?
slang term for ‘a very long time’ was donkey’s years or donkey’s ears. My first thoughts were, “donkey’s years of course – what would ears have to do with it?”. It turns out that I was being rather hasty. Donkey’s years is now the more commonly used slang term when meaning ‘a long time’, but donkey’s ears, although used little in recent years, has been a jokey alternative for some time – certainly from the early 20th century, viz. E. V. Lucas’ Vermilion Box, 1916:
“Now for my first bath for what the men call ‘Donkey’s ears’, meaning years and years.”
This slightly pre-dates the earliest printed version that I can find of donkey’s years, in the US newspaper The Bridgeport Telegram, 1923:
“With a heavy make-up, you’ll be the cutest vamp I’ve seen in donkey’s years.”
It is quite likely that donkey’s ears was the earlier form and that it originated as rhyming slang, in an allusion to the length of the animal’s ears. Donkey’s ears/years is often shortened just to donkeys. That is characteristic of rhyming slang, as in syrup (of figs) – wig or plates (of meat) – feet.
Donkey’s ears works as rhyming slang whereas donkey’s years doesn’t. In rhyming slang the last word of a short phrase is rhymed with the word that gives the slang meaning. For example, trouble and strife – wife, apples and pears – stairs, etc. It makes little sense for the phrase to have originated in slang form as donkey’s years, as that would rhyme ‘years’ with ‘years’.
Donkey’s years The migration from donkey’s ears to donkey’s years was no doubt aided by the belief that donkeys live a long time. There’s some truth in that. Lively Laddie, a donkey who had lived up to his name for many years while plying his trade on Blackpool Pleasure Beach was, until his death at age 62, a contender for the ‘oldest living donkey’ title.
Google is such a wonderful thing! Now, by tomorrow when I Google “donkey’s years”, I’ll get this blog as one of the listings!!!
You’re a star!!!!!!!!!!!!!
LOL
jb
LOL! Yeah, here I could have spend time answering you properly. . or I could just go to google and find someone who already did it and just copy and paste! That’s the problem with me picking up so many weird phrases!!
Surprised you didn’t send me this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UOhT6RkYLLw
It’s for us yougin’ college students to connect with other college students! Of course, that’s how it started. It’s slowly morphing into Myspace and Myspace is slowly morphing into Facebook until they look like twin sites. I like Facebook better because you have a slightly more mature set-up than Myspace, and you almost always know everyone’s real name. That’s convienient if you don’t like the whole complete anonymity thing.
Facebook is worthless unless you have many of your friends on it. Then it’s easy to use to track people. Like a little blackbook on email.
now the funny bit is the sudden burst of new “invites”. LOL!!
Facebook is for connecting with old flames so that you can once again suck face.