Texas Fishing Forum

Is anyone else tired of the term...

Posted By: Champion1

Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 02:43 PM

It was a grind today. Man I get so tired of hearing that, seems every interview you see with a fisherman that's all they say anymore. Either that or That's a gamechanger! Come up something original guys come on!
Posted By: bradnitro175

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 02:45 PM

"Second to none" gets me going
Posted By: And Mye

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 02:54 PM

I hate "prostaffer". It really means a customer with a discount.
Posted By: slim 285

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 02:57 PM

crying
Posted By: Topwater2

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 02:58 PM

"I tell you what"
Posted By: atisch12

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 03:05 PM

Ooh, I love rants. I want to "Thank God" for giving me this great forum to express my displeasure.
Posted By: T-Rig Ranger

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 03:10 PM

Originally Posted By: B_bop77
I hate "prostaffer". It really means a customer with a discount.

Funny and true. roflmao
Although a salesman with a discount may be more appropriate.
Posted By: J.P. Greeson

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 03:22 PM

Originally Posted By: T-Rig Ranger
Originally Posted By: B_bop77
I hate "prostaffer". It really means a customer with a discount.

Funny and true. roflmao
Although a salesman with a discount may be more appropriate.


I guess that depends on who you are. I know a fair number of people who get a lot more than a discount.
Posted By: redskeeter190

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 03:25 PM

I hate...."I swung for the fences today.....tried to catch 5 big ones".....don't they all go out and "try" to catch 5 big ones????
Posted By: HasBen

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 03:26 PM

I watched a couple of episodes of Major League Fishing that I had recorded this week. I believe every bass fishing cliche ever uttered is used during the course of the show. "Thank you, Jesus", "it's a giant", "look at that pig", "I got me a pattern"....they are all there in one 1 hour show, especially if Shaw is fishing.
Posted By: Chelsea FC

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 03:27 PM

"you got'em?"
Posted By: catslayer

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 03:31 PM

Originally Posted By: redskeeter190
I hate...."I swung for the fences today.....tried to catch 5 big ones".....don't they all go out and "try" to catch 5 big ones????



go watch swindle talk about that in his fishing comedy hour, you will DIE laughing
Posted By: Jake Shannon(Skeet4Life)

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 03:37 PM

Originally Posted By: redskeeter190
I hate...."I swung for the fences today.....tried to catch 5 big ones".....don't they all go out and "try" to catch 5 big ones????

Not really many go out and try and get 5 keepers. "Swinging for the fences" would be going out and just fishing for bigger fish and ignoring to smaller and easier to catch ones
Posted By: JIM SR.

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 03:48 PM

Its amazing how religious they get when they catch a fish flehan ,..and when they lose one it's..
beep..beepbeep...beep !!!! realmad
Posted By: Kay Dyson

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 04:26 PM

Originally Posted By: JIM SR.
Its amazing how religious they get when they catch a fish flehan ,..and when they lose one it's..
beep..beepbeep...beep !!!! realmad


roflmao....... Son...
Posted By: GoArmy

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 04:41 PM

"Thats what I'm talking about"! hate, hate, hate this one.
Posted By: Jigfish

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 05:05 PM

In any sport, "I want to thank Jesus Christ", Then if it all falls apart., Beep, peep. I'm so sick of that.
Posted By: lconn4

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 05:05 PM

I was on em all during prefishing... "my pattern just didn't hold up" roflmao
Posted By: TXWingStinger

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 05:21 PM

Not really a term but the post about MLF reminded me, anyone ever notice how often Marty Stone says the word "literally"? I noticed it the last time I was watching some old episodes and now when he talks it's all I can focus on. It's nerve racking.
Posted By: BigBassJake

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 05:57 PM

It is what it is... WTF does that even mean? I can not stand that phrase
Posted By: stuntmandave

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 06:59 PM

Originally Posted By: redskeeter190
I hate...."I swung for the fences today.....tried to catch 5 big ones".....don't they all go out and "try" to catch 5 big ones????


This
Posted By: T-Rig Ranger

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 07:12 PM

This ain't a fishing term but anytime I hear it makes me want to punch somebody....ANYWHO!!! barf
Posted By: RedRocket87

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 07:40 PM

dude! dude! dude! dude! its a giant
Posted By: RedRocket87

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 07:43 PM

also how shaw gets really high pitched roflmao
Posted By: Kay Dyson

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 07:53 PM

Originally Posted By: jbooten87
also how shaw gets really high pitched roflmao

Ultra High Soprano.... nuts
Posted By: soonersorlaters

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 08:03 PM

"That was a good one too" ................after one comes unbuttoned right after the hook set.

I've never heard them say: Meh, dink.
Posted By: ogles824 (aka Lakewaydr50)

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 08:47 PM

These phrases and cliche's never really bother me it's the outdoor or fishing shows that turn into and infomercial for the sponsor(s) that bug the mess out of me. Bill Dance used to do this a lot, especially for Strike King......
Posted By: Todd Ivins

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 09:23 PM

All I ever hear in Tournaments..."someone's catching them somewhere..." DUHHHHHHHHHHH
Posted By: djones03

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 09:36 PM

I generally sit out there and say what the he!! am i doing?
Posted By: Rhino68W

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 09:44 PM

Originally Posted By: catslayer
Originally Posted By: redskeeter190
I hate...."I swung for the fences today.....tried to catch 5 big ones".....don't they all go out and "try" to catch 5 big ones????



go watch swindle talk about that in his fishing comedy hour, you will DIE laughing


X2, that dude is the best angler to watch purly because of how funny he is. If he had a live feed during a fishing trip I would watch every second of it. "Water's so high I saw 2 ducks in waders" roflmao
Posted By: formula462

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/17/15 11:19 PM

That's why they call it fishin' and not catchin'
Posted By: RWjr

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/18/15 01:12 AM

There a stix
Posted By: Rayzor

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/18/15 01:38 AM

"Biggun, biggun"!
Posted By: Frank the Tank

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/18/15 02:15 AM

Originally Posted By: Jigfish
In any sport, "I want to thank Jesus Christ", Then if it all falls apart., Beep, peep. I'm so sick of that.


This always wears me out too..... Jesus ain't real concerned with you catching a bass
Posted By: JoshMan734

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/18/15 02:21 AM

One word... Produced! "This will produce!" Or "that point will produce" get that [censored] out of here
Posted By: west tex angler

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/18/15 02:43 AM

Grown men calling each other ,"dude"
I guess I'm "old fashioned" but that bugs me.
The way fish are handled on Match Fishing bugs me. Dropping them in the boat can't be good for them, and all they get is a two minute penalty.
Posted By: Douglas J

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/18/15 03:28 AM

Originally Posted By: west tex angler
Grown men calling each other ,"dude"
I guess I'm "old fashioned" but that bugs me.
The way fish are handled on Match Fishing bugs me. Dropping them in the boat can't be good for them, and all they get is a two minute penalty.


Posted By: Thad Rains

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/18/15 10:46 AM

If it upsets you that much, just stop watching and go fishing. That is what I do. Just sayin'. MOF, I am out the door in about 15 minutes to go fish a nontournament day. Fished last night in a working man's T I run and won it, so I am feeling quite good about myself. Sorry.

Tight lines, keep safe and good luck.

Thad Rains
Posted By: ezbassin

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/18/15 10:55 AM

Originally Posted By: T-Rig Ranger
This ain't a fishing term but anytime I hear it makes me want to punch somebody....ANYWHO!!! barf


I agree....who ever came up with that?
Posted By: Fishspanker

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/18/15 11:00 AM

"Giant" has to b e the most over used.
Posted By: Okie Poke

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/18/15 01:06 PM

Not fishing lingo, but I'm sooooooooo tired of hearing....

"ATTAKID"
Posted By: Rudy Lackey

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/18/15 01:12 PM

He's a stick.
Posted By: Frank the Tank

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/18/15 01:17 PM

Originally Posted By: Fishspanker
"Giant" has to b e the most over used.


x 1,000,000 so overused..... and Shaw Grigsby of all people needs to figure out what a "Big ol PIPG" really is cause those 2 lb.r's he's catchin at Caddo ain't it
Posted By: Bobby Milam

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/18/15 06:46 PM

Originally Posted By: Frank the Tank
Originally Posted By: Fishspanker
"Giant" has to b e the most over used.


x 1,000,000 so overused..... and Shaw Grigsby of all people needs to figure out what a "Big ol PIPG" really is cause those 2 lb.r's he's catchin at Caddo ain't it


I agree. I like his show but his talking is annoying. Always squealing like a girl, calling every catch a pig and basically just acting like he has never caught a 2lb fish before. I wonder if he ever watches his show and hears what he sounds like.
Posted By: kingfish_1970

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/19/15 07:48 AM

Originally Posted By: redskeeter190
I hate...."I swung for the fences today.....tried to catch 5 big ones".....don't they all go out and "try" to catch 5 big ones????


This one is usually in conjunction with either a goose egg, of one one pounder. Just an excuse as to why he didn't catch a darn thing.
Posted By: H B

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/19/15 12:51 PM

"I got it Dialed in"
"I got em figgered out"
"It's a Giant"
"I'm targeting cover"
"Bigun"
"The up skinny"
"They out deep"
Posted By: Rayzor

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/20/15 06:47 PM

Originally Posted By: Bobby Milam
Originally Posted By: Frank the Tank
Originally Posted By: Fishspanker
"Giant" has to b e the most over used.


x 1,000,000 so overused..... and Shaw Grigsby of all people needs to figure out what a "Big ol PIPG" really is cause those 2 lb.r's he's catchin at Caddo ain't it


I agree. I like his show but his talking is annoying. Always squealing like a girl, calling every catch a pig and basically just acting like he has never caught a 2lb fish before. I wonder if he ever watches his show and hears what he sounds like.


I am sure he is a great guy but listening to Shaw is like fingernails on a chalkboard to me. I bet he squeals all the way to the bank with Strike King's check, though.
Posted By: Barefootk47

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/20/15 07:01 PM

Preach...I don't see how Marty can go out every time without a hat and not come back lookin' like the inside of a seared Ribeye...Have Mercy !!! Hash-tag Atomic Sun Block....
Posted By: bobrfishes

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/20/15 10:11 PM

"hashtag" should be removed from the language
Posted By: largemouthokie

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/20/15 11:03 PM

That's what I'm talkin about! Also, I could have caught 20 pounds today but I shook them off!
Posted By: rodiebob

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 12:17 AM

Mercer fishing..
Posted By: "Ol Spookin

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 12:18 AM

Originally Posted By: bobrfishes
"hashtag" should be removed from the language


this ^^^^
Posted By: Chance22

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 12:50 AM

Does anyone know what a dude is?
Posted By: David Burton

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 01:34 AM

Hi, I'm David, I have to admit: I used "Game Changer" on Sunday. But it really was, it put us in third place.
Posted By: CLedbetter

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 03:10 AM

"That fish is so healthy looking." I feel like guys on tv will call the most malnourished fish "healthy."
Posted By: 1442

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 01:01 PM

"SWIMMERS" Meaning just keeper size fish. Even ten pounders swim. duh!
Posted By: InTheClear

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 01:28 PM

Originally Posted By: JIM SR.
Its amazing how religious they get when they catch a fish flehan ,..and when they lose one it's..
beep..beepbeep...beep !!!! realmad


This is very true!
Posted By: GeoFisher

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 03:56 PM

"reaction bite" just kills me. Aren't they all reactions? (See Signature)
Posted By: AgSellers04

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 03:59 PM

It bugs me when someone thinks they have to talk the whole time they are fishing. Just shut up and fish.
Posted By: 96speed

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 04:49 PM

Originally Posted By: B_bop77
I hate "prostaffer". It really means a customer with a discount.


This man speaks the truth.
Posted By: Razorback

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 04:53 PM

Originally Posted By: bobrfishes
"hashtag" should be removed from the language


The Subway commercial with the three alleged males "hashtagging" each other back and forth makes me homicidal.
Posted By: Jake Shannon(Skeet4Life)

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 06:16 PM

Man y'all have allot of peeves
Posted By: Douglas J

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 06:27 PM

#peoplewhoworryaboutit
Posted By: Brad R

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 06:31 PM

It is the nature of how our speech developed/develops. What made Shakespeare the most influential writer in history was the fact that he wrote things just like this that deeply impacted people (they'd never heard such language) that were picked up and have been used for literally centuries by countless English speaking people likely without them knowing the source. I bet you can find a dozen or so below that have been used on this forum. Give it up for William: (source http://www.pathguy.com/shakeswo.htm)

•All our yesterdays (Macbeth)

•All that glitters is not gold (The Merchant of Venice)("glisters")

•All's well that ends well (title)

•As good luck would have it (The Merry Wives of Windsor)

•As merry as the day is long (Much Ado About Nothing / King John)

•Bated breath (The Merchant of Venice)

•Bag and baggage (As You Like It / Winter's Tale)

•Bear a charmed life (Macbeth)

•Be-all and the end-all (Macbeth)

•Beggar all description (Antony and Cleopatra)

•Better foot before ("best foot forward") (King John)

•The better part of valor is discretion (I Henry IV; possibly already a known saying)

•In a better world than this (As You Like It)

•Neither a borrower nor a lender be (Hamlet)

•Brave new world (The Tempest)

•Break the ice (The Taming of the Shrew)

•Breathed his last (3 Henry VI)

•Brevity is the soul of wit (Hamlet)

•Refuse to budge an inch (Measure for Measure / Taming of the Shrew)

•Catch a cold (Cymbeline; claimed but seems unlikely, seems to refer to bad weather)

•Cold comfort (The Taming of the Shrew / King John)

•Conscience does make cowards of us all (Hamlet)

•Come what come may ("come what may") (Macbeth)

•Comparisons are odorous (Much Ado about Nothing)

•Crack of doom (Macbeth)

•Dead as a doornail (2 Henry VI)

•A dish fit for the gods (Julius Caesar)

•Cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war (Julius Caesar)

•Dog will have his day (Hamlet; quoted earlier by Erasmus and Queen Elizabeth)

•Devil incarnate (Titus Andronicus / Henry V)

•Eaten me out of house and home (2 Henry IV)

•Elbow room (King John; first attested 1540 according to Merriam-Webster)

•Farewell to all my greatness (Henry VIII)

•Faint hearted (I Henry VI)

•Fancy-free (Midsummer Night's Dream)

•Fight till the last gasp (I Henry VI)

•Flaming youth (Hamlet)

•Forever and a day (As You Like It)

•For goodness' sake (Henry VIII)

•Foregone conclusion (Othello)

•Full circle (King Lear)

•The game is afoot (I Henry IV)

•The game is up (Cymbeline)

•Give the devil his due (I Henry IV)

•Good riddance (Troilus and Cressida)

•Jealousy is the green-eyed monster (Othello)

•It was Greek to me (Julius Caesar)

•Heart of gold (Henry V)

•Her infinite variety (Antony and Cleopatra)

•'Tis high time (The Comedy of Errors)

•Hoist with his own petard (Hamlet)

•Household words (Henry V)

•A horse, a horse! My kingdom for a horse! (Richard III)

•Ill wind which blows no man to good (2 Henry IV)

•Improbable fiction (Twelfth Night)

•In a pickle (The Tempest)

•In my heart of hearts (Hamlet)

•In my mind's eye (Hamlet)

•Infinite space (Hamlet)

•Infirm of purpose (Macbeth)

•In my book of memory (I Henry VI)

•It is but so-so(As You Like It)

•It smells to heaven (Hamlet)

•Itching palm (Julius Caesar)

•Kill with kindness (Taming of the Shrew)

•Killing frost (Henry VIII)

•Knit brow (The Rape of Lucrece)

•Knock knock! Who's there? (Macbeth)

•Laid on with a trowel (As You Like It)

•Laughing stock (The Merry Wives of Windsor)

•Laugh yourself into stitches (Twelfth Night)

•Lean and hungry look (Julius Caesar)

•Lie low (Much Ado about Nothing)

•Live long day (Julius Caesar)

•Love is blind (Merchant of Venice)

•Men's evil manners live in brass; their virtues we write in water (Henry VIII)

•Melted into thin air (The Tempest)

•Though this be madness, yet there is method in it ("There's a method to my madness") (Hamlet)

•Make a virtue of necessity (The Two Gentlemen of Verona)

•The Makings of(Henry VIII)

•Milk of human kindness (Macbeth)

•Ministering angel (Hamlet)

•Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows (The Tempest)

•More honored in the breach than in the observance (Hamlet)

•More in sorrow than in anger (Hamlet)

•More sinned against than sinning (King Lear)

•Much Ado About Nothing (title)

•Murder most foul (Hamlet)

•Naked truth (Love's Labours Lost)

•Neither rhyme nor reason (As You Like It)

•Not slept one wink (Cymbeline)

•Nothing in his life became him like the leaving it (Macbeth)

•[Obvious] as a nose on a man's face (The Two Gentlemen of Verona)

•Once more into the breach (Henry V)

•One fell swoop (Macbeth)

•One that loved not wisely but too well (Othello)

•Time is out of joint (Hamlet)

•Out of the jaws of death (Twelfth Night)

•Own flesh and blood (Hamlet)

•Star-crossed lovers (Romeo and Juliet)

•Parting is such sweet sorrow (Romeo and Juliet)

•What's past is prologue (The Tempest)

•[What] a piece of work [is man] (Hamlet)

•Pitched battle (Taming of the Shrew)

•A plague on both your houses (Romeo and Juliet)

•Play fast and loose (King John)

•Pomp and circumstance (Othello)

•[A poor] thing, but mine own (As You Like It)

•Pound of flesh (The Merchant of Venice)

•Primrose path (Hamlet)

•Quality of mercy is not strained (The Merchant of Venice)

•Salad days (Antony and Cleopatra)

•Sea change (The Tempest)

•Seen better days (As You Like It? Timon of Athens?)

•Send packing (I Henry IV)

•How sharper than the serpent's tooth it is to have a thankless child (King Lear)

•Shall I compare thee to a summer's day (Sonnets)

•Make short shrift (Richard III)

•Sick at heart (Hamlet)

•Snail paced (Troilus and Cressida)

•Something in the wind (The Comedy of Errors)

•Something wicked this way comes (Macbeth)

•A sorry sight (Macbeth)

•Sound and fury (Macbeth)

•Spotless reputation (Richard II)

•Stony hearted (I Henry IV)

•Such stuff as dreams are made on (The Tempest)

•Smooth runs the water where the brook is deep ("Still waters run deep") (2 Henry VI)

•The short and the long of it (The Merry Wives of Windsor)

•Sweet are the uses of adversity (As You Like It)

•Sweets to the sweet (Hamlet)

•Swift as a shadow (A Midsummer Night's Dream

•Tedious as a twice-told tale (King John)

•Set my teeth on edge (I Henry IV)

•Tell truth and shame the devil (1 Henry IV)

•Thereby hangs a tale (Othello; in context, this seems to have been already in use)

•There's no such thing (?) (Macbeth)

•There's the rub (Hamlet)

•This mortal coil (Hamlet)

•To gild refined gold, to paint the lily ("to gild the lily") (King John)

•To thine own self be true (Hamlet)

•Too much of a good thing (As You Like It)

•Tower of strength (Richard III)

•Towering passion (Hamlet)

•Trippingly on the tongue (Hamlet)

•Truth will out (The Merchant of Venice)

•Violent delights have violent ends (Romeo and Juliet)

•Wear my heart upon my sleeve (Othello)

•What the dickens (The Merry Wives of Windsor)

•What's done is done (Macbeth)

•What's in a name? A rose by any other name would smell as sweet. (Romeo and Juliet)

•What fools these mortals be (A Midsummer Night's Dream)

•What the dickens (The Merry Wives of Windsor)

•Wild-goose chase (Romeo and Juliet)

•Wish is father to that thought (2 Henry IV)

•Witching time of night (Hamlet)

•Working-day world (As You Like It)

•The world's my oyster (Merry Wives of Windsor)

•Yeoman's service (Hamlet)

Cheers! Brad
Posted By: Jake Shannon(Skeet4Life)

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 06:40 PM

Originally Posted By: Doug R.
#peoplewhoworryaboutit

Got 99 problems and what people say when they fish ain't one.
Posted By: SteezMacQueen

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 08:34 PM

Originally Posted By: Brad R
It is the nature of how our speech developed/develops. What made Shakespeare the most influential writer in history was the fact that he wrote things just like this that deeply impacted people (they'd never heard such language) that were picked up and have been used for literally centuries by countless English speaking people likely without them knowing the source. I bet you can find a dozen or so below that have been used on this forum. Give it up for William: (source http://www.pathguy.com/shakeswo.htm)

•All our yesterdays (Macbeth)

•All that glitters is not gold (The Merchant of Venice)("glisters")

•All's well that ends well (title)

•As good luck would have it (The Merry Wives of Windsor)

•As merry as the day is long (Much Ado About Nothing / King John)

•Bated breath (The Merchant of Venice)

•Bag and baggage (As You Like It / Winter's Tale)

•Bear a charmed life (Macbeth)

•Be-all and the end-all (Macbeth)

•Beggar all description (Antony and Cleopatra)

•Better foot before ("best foot forward") (King John)

•The better part of valor is discretion (I Henry IV; possibly already a known saying)

•In a better world than this (As You Like It)

•Neither a borrower nor a lender be (Hamlet)

•Brave new world (The Tempest)

•Break the ice (The Taming of the Shrew)

•Breathed his last (3 Henry VI)

•Brevity is the soul of wit (Hamlet)

•Refuse to budge an inch (Measure for Measure / Taming of the Shrew)

•Catch a cold (Cymbeline; claimed but seems unlikely, seems to refer to bad weather)

•Cold comfort (The Taming of the Shrew / King John)

•Conscience does make cowards of us all (Hamlet)

•Come what come may ("come what may") (Macbeth)

•Comparisons are odorous (Much Ado about Nothing)

•Crack of doom (Macbeth)

•Dead as a doornail (2 Henry VI)

•A dish fit for the gods (Julius Caesar)

•Cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war (Julius Caesar)

•Dog will have his day (Hamlet; quoted earlier by Erasmus and Queen Elizabeth)

•Devil incarnate (Titus Andronicus / Henry V)

•Eaten me out of house and home (2 Henry IV)

•Elbow room (King John; first attested 1540 according to Merriam-Webster)

•Farewell to all my greatness (Henry VIII)

•Faint hearted (I Henry VI)

•Fancy-free (Midsummer Night's Dream)

•Fight till the last gasp (I Henry VI)

•Flaming youth (Hamlet)

•Forever and a day (As You Like It)

•For goodness' sake (Henry VIII)

•Foregone conclusion (Othello)

•Full circle (King Lear)

•The game is afoot (I Henry IV)

•The game is up (Cymbeline)

•Give the devil his due (I Henry IV)

•Good riddance (Troilus and Cressida)

•Jealousy is the green-eyed monster (Othello)

•It was Greek to me (Julius Caesar)

•Heart of gold (Henry V)

•Her infinite variety (Antony and Cleopatra)

•'Tis high time (The Comedy of Errors)

•Hoist with his own petard (Hamlet)

•Household words (Henry V)

•A horse, a horse! My kingdom for a horse! (Richard III)

•Ill wind which blows no man to good (2 Henry IV)

•Improbable fiction (Twelfth Night)

•In a pickle (The Tempest)

•In my heart of hearts (Hamlet)

•In my mind's eye (Hamlet)

•Infinite space (Hamlet)

•Infirm of purpose (Macbeth)

•In my book of memory (I Henry VI)

•It is but so-so(As You Like It)

•It smells to heaven (Hamlet)

•Itching palm (Julius Caesar)

•Kill with kindness (Taming of the Shrew)

•Killing frost (Henry VIII)

•Knit brow (The Rape of Lucrece)

•Knock knock! Who's there? (Macbeth)

•Laid on with a trowel (As You Like It)

•Laughing stock (The Merry Wives of Windsor)

•Laugh yourself into stitches (Twelfth Night)

•Lean and hungry look (Julius Caesar)

•Lie low (Much Ado about Nothing)

•Live long day (Julius Caesar)

•Love is blind (Merchant of Venice)

•Men's evil manners live in brass; their virtues we write in water (Henry VIII)

•Melted into thin air (The Tempest)

•Though this be madness, yet there is method in it ("There's a method to my madness") (Hamlet)

•Make a virtue of necessity (The Two Gentlemen of Verona)

•The Makings of(Henry VIII)

•Milk of human kindness (Macbeth)

•Ministering angel (Hamlet)

•Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows (The Tempest)

•More honored in the breach than in the observance (Hamlet)

•More in sorrow than in anger (Hamlet)

•More sinned against than sinning (King Lear)

•Much Ado About Nothing (title)

•Murder most foul (Hamlet)

•Naked truth (Love's Labours Lost)

•Neither rhyme nor reason (As You Like It)

•Not slept one wink (Cymbeline)

•Nothing in his life became him like the leaving it (Macbeth)

•[Obvious] as a nose on a man's face (The Two Gentlemen of Verona)

•Once more into the breach (Henry V)

•One fell swoop (Macbeth)

•One that loved not wisely but too well (Othello)

•Time is out of joint (Hamlet)

•Out of the jaws of death (Twelfth Night)

•Own flesh and blood (Hamlet)

•Star-crossed lovers (Romeo and Juliet)

•Parting is such sweet sorrow (Romeo and Juliet)

•What's past is prologue (The Tempest)

•[What] a piece of work [is man] (Hamlet)

•Pitched battle (Taming of the Shrew)

•A plague on both your houses (Romeo and Juliet)

•Play fast and loose (King John)

•Pomp and circumstance (Othello)

•[A poor] thing, but mine own (As You Like It)

•Pound of flesh (The Merchant of Venice)

•Primrose path (Hamlet)

•Quality of mercy is not strained (The Merchant of Venice)

•Salad days (Antony and Cleopatra)

•Sea change (The Tempest)

•Seen better days (As You Like It? Timon of Athens?)

•Send packing (I Henry IV)

•How sharper than the serpent's tooth it is to have a thankless child (King Lear)

•Shall I compare thee to a summer's day (Sonnets)

•Make short shrift (Richard III)

•Sick at heart (Hamlet)

•Snail paced (Troilus and Cressida)

•Something in the wind (The Comedy of Errors)

•Something wicked this way comes (Macbeth)

•A sorry sight (Macbeth)

•Sound and fury (Macbeth)

•Spotless reputation (Richard II)

•Stony hearted (I Henry IV)

•Such stuff as dreams are made on (The Tempest)

•Smooth runs the water where the brook is deep ("Still waters run deep") (2 Henry VI)

•The short and the long of it (The Merry Wives of Windsor)

•Sweet are the uses of adversity (As You Like It)

•Sweets to the sweet (Hamlet)

•Swift as a shadow (A Midsummer Night's Dream

•Tedious as a twice-told tale (King John)

•Set my teeth on edge (I Henry IV)

•Tell truth and shame the devil (1 Henry IV)

•Thereby hangs a tale (Othello; in context, this seems to have been already in use)

•There's no such thing (?) (Macbeth)

•There's the rub (Hamlet)

•This mortal coil (Hamlet)

•To gild refined gold, to paint the lily ("to gild the lily") (King John)

•To thine own self be true (Hamlet)

•Too much of a good thing (As You Like It)

•Tower of strength (Richard III)

•Towering passion (Hamlet)

•Trippingly on the tongue (Hamlet)

•Truth will out (The Merchant of Venice)

•Violent delights have violent ends (Romeo and Juliet)

•Wear my heart upon my sleeve (Othello)

•What the dickens (The Merry Wives of Windsor)

•What's done is done (Macbeth)

•What's in a name? A rose by any other name would smell as sweet. (Romeo and Juliet)

•What fools these mortals be (A Midsummer Night's Dream)

•What the dickens (The Merry Wives of Windsor)

•Wild-goose chase (Romeo and Juliet)

•Wish is father to that thought (2 Henry IV)

•Witching time of night (Hamlet)

•Working-day world (As You Like It)

•The world's my oyster (Merry Wives of Windsor)

•Yeoman's service (Hamlet)

Cheers! Brad


My favorite?
"Led Zepplin sucks, and so do you, man!" Kid Rock from the movie Joe Dirt.

bolt
Posted By: SteezMacQueen

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 08:36 PM

But really. The one that kills... "That's what they call it fishin' yadayadayada..."
Posted By: manhunter

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/21/15 10:23 PM

I've got some good ones in my boat. Check em out: (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) (Censored) and what a beautiful day....
Posted By: fouzman

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/22/15 12:08 AM

If all I could catch were 'swimmers' I'd probably get tired of my dinks being called that. Anyone know why those bank runners get called 'swimmers'? My money's on the fact that they look like shiners when u raise the lid on the livewell or minner bucket.
Posted By: Trickster

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/22/15 12:32 AM

Originally Posted By: largemouthokie
That's what I'm talkin about! Also, I could have caught 20 pounds today but I shook them off!


Posted By: djones03

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/22/15 12:36 AM

I hate, "I had a big one on, but I couldn't turn her head"
Posted By: Brandon Dickenson

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/22/15 02:37 AM

I should have won
Posted By: The Rodfather

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/22/15 03:28 AM

"Just let the fish tell you what they want." I hate that saying! Fish can't talk!!
Posted By: Champion1

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/25/15 04:42 AM

Man i hate that one too!
Posted By: redskeeter190

Re: Is anyone else tired of the term... - 04/25/15 10:29 AM

"I was fishing this deal.....while I was fishing this deal....a new I discovered a new deal, no one else was fishing this deal....so I fished this deal, until, the bite changed, then I adapted to another deal, and fished this deal until, yet, another deal was uncovered....so I was fishing a deal, withing a deal....it was a great deal.....a deal I never expected to fish, while fishing the other deal" barf
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