View Full Version : see a man about a horse
Gilligan
08-28-1999, 06:52 PM
What is the origin of the expression, "I gotta see a man about a horse"? Maybe I'm dense, but I just never got this one. That is, I know what it means, but, why?
NanoByte
08-28-1999, 11:22 PM
I think Texans are unclear on a lot of concepts, but try this Texas Horseshoe:
http://offroadcommode.com/\
Ray (500#? Texans overdo everything.)
Big Iron
08-29-1999, 01:33 AM
You know, that's a good fucking question! Sometimes it's a "man about a dog," but still. It seems like that would be a good excuse to use to blow somebody off in days past, though.
Thanks, mighty Gilligan.
Carl Berry
08-29-1999, 06:26 AM
In the same vein, I couldn't understand "He went to s--t & the hogs ate him"??!! Any clues?
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Zymurgist
jayron 32
08-29-1999, 03:35 PM
"See a man about a horse" is a euphemism for "have to go take a piss." Since it used to be impolite to refer directly to bodily functions, people used to make random excuses for having to part company for using the john. Why it's "See a man about a horse" and not some other random activity, I'm not sure, but the phrase most definately and commonly refers to going to the restroom.
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Jason R Remy
"No amount of legislation can solve America's problems."
-- Jimmy Carter (1980)
Gilligan
08-29-1999, 04:00 PM
I knew it meant that, Jason. Other phrases I've heard for it are more descriptive. My favorite - "Gotta shake the dew off the lily." I just don't get the horse.
NanoByte
08-29-1999, 09:24 PM
I think the whole idea was that what was said should have no relevance. One might just as well have said '. . .to see a horse about a man.' I guess horses have never needed any equivalent excuse. Neigh!
Ray
Zyada
08-29-1999, 09:31 PM
WAG - this phrase probably started in the days where horses were a primary mode of transportion & outhouses were where you went to the bathroom. So, if your outhouse is behind the stables, you pretend it's the stables you're going to & not the outhouse behind.
Would be like a woman saying she's going to powder her nose.
Stephen
08-29-1999, 09:34 PM
I knew it meant that, Jason. Other phrases I've heard for it are more descriptive. My favorite - "Gotta shake the dew off the lily." I just don't get the horse.
I would imagine it became popular because of the underlying reference to 'hung like a horse'. A guy gets to excuse himself in a manner that may make some woman think "A horse? Hmmm..."
As evidenced by Beeruser's statement in another thread, some guys are desperate to be thought about that way.
Myself, I've coined the phrase "mysterious dance of the hydrolic iguana" but that's just me.
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Stephen
stephmon@aol.com
http://stephen.fathom.org
Satellite Hunting 1.1.0 visible satellite pass prediction shareware available for download at
http://stephen.fathom.org/sathunt.html
Temujin
08-31-1999, 07:04 AM
People from Mongolia use an almost identical euphamism. It translates roughly as: ''I'm going to look at a horse.''
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