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Phrases And Their Origins
Resting On Your Laurels
Caesar: 'Ere, where are my laurels? [hitches up his arse and finds them on his seat]
Oh, I've been resting on them.
This classic gag from the film "Carry On Cleo" in which Kenneth Williams puts on
a masterful performance as Roman emporer Julius Caesar, goes no way to explaining
the meaning of the phrase "Resting On Your Laurels".
We don't literally sit on a laurel-leaf headband, we basically find a (usually
unwise) comfort in our inertia.
But what's that got to do with laurels?
There's a toga and a dress circle ticket at the colosseum for the winner.
Matt: winner!
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This phrase is a kind of cockney rhyming slang.
It refers to the mornings that you awaken lying on your front with morning glory:
Laurels = Laurel and Hardy, Hardon!
"I awoke resting on my Laurel!" (As I do most mornings!)
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Mike:
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The phrase was actually introduced back in the sixties when Cilla Black was a
struggling young starlet.
Failing to entertain her audiences with her singing, dancing and general chit-chat, she found that
the only talent she had was her repeated usage of her catchphrase "Lorra Lorra Laffs".
Her producer once remarked that it sounded like she was saying "Laurel Laurel Laffs" and that since
Cilla in the decades to come never added anything of further value to her act, she was resting on
her "Laurel Laurel Laffs".
Not a lot of people know that.
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Phrases And Their Origins
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SaTURDay
23
November
2024
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