WrongTale
Friday 13th April 2012 1:40pm
Riga
491 posts
Thank you all for explanations. This is definitely an enlightening discussion - even if we dearly miss the chance to see how well a baboon is hung
Seriously, for me the initial idea was that the funny part in vicar's description "Quiet, gentle, hung like a baboon" is the image of quite, gentle vicar having an enormous tackle.
Although the opposite might seen funny as well, regardless of what the real-life members these monkeys have.
Quote: Tursiops @ April 13 2012, 1:31 PM BST
And sometimes characters simply use phraseology that is intended to reflect their background and character. George is essentially Bertie Wooster with the same fondness for idiomatic English and neologisms.
I had some googling on this Goodbyeee phrase from George:
"I remember Bumfluff's house-master wrote and told me that Sticky had been out for a duck and the Gubber had snitched a parcel sausage-end and gone goose-over-stumps frog-side."
And one person in a forum explained that this is clearly a parody of the cliched talk of WWI British soldiers, which is supposed to include such colourful expressions.