A wind from the wrong corner

I don’t know if it has been windier this year than in other years, but we certainly seem to have had a lot of it in 2015. Earlier in the year there were storms and as our house faces the sea – about ¼ mile from the shore, we do get a lot of blustery weather anyway. But over spring and now we’re into summer, we still have a lot of very sharp and chilly winds. Even though the sun has been out it has been really a bit nipsome!

It seems to have been the same in Europe, my Dutch friend shared a lovely idiom which she got from her mother or grandmother, ‘the wind’s from the wrong corner’. This got me thinking about other weather related idioms and sayings; I’m sure they have them in every language as my Dutch friend has shown, but I do wonder if we have more in English, because as an island off a large continent we maybe subject to more extremes. Nowhere in Britain is more than seventy miles from the nearest coast.

I did a little investigation and came across a few windy sayings:

  • billy wind
  • chill wind of something
  • get wind of
  • ill wind.
  • know which way the wind blows
  • long-winded
  • put the wind up someone
  • sail close to the wind
  • shoot the breeze
  • something in the wind
  • throw caution to the wind
  • twisting in the wind
  • windbag
  • windfall

I was thinking about wind, and the things we say, when I overheard an elderly lady on the bus, ‘Ooh,it’s that wind it won’t sit down’… she’s right! It’s a lovely day today but the wind won’t sit down!

 

 

 

4 Comments

    1. Lois

      Thank you David!!! We didn’t manage to find any grits, but we had some amazing other food – breakfasts in particular… my goodness, the breakfasts! xxx

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