Mrs. Olsen: Good heavens, Caulfield, you've got ants in your pants. Caulfield: Better than mites in my tights. Mrs. Olsen: That makes no sense. Caulfield: I got the impression that was the format.
Richard, popular sayings get twisted over the years….It was originally heals over head, Also, according to my dad who was born in 1904, the phrase wasn’t 23 skidoo, it was 22 skidoo and 23 skidee….meaning going quickly….
That’s the basis of a common mnemonic for remembering the difference between stalactites and stalagmites. When you get ants in your pants, the mites go up and the tights go down…
“Ants in your pants” can be dealt with via a nice washing, whereas “Mites in your tights” requires a hypodermic injection series and some serious lotion in the nether regions.
This reminds me of the mnemonic to remember the difference between stalactites and stalagmites. It’s “ants in the pants”: the mites go up and the tights come down.
Stalactites stick tight to the ceiling; stalagmites might, but since they are already on the floor, you don’t know. (And for the picky, it should be tightly; I do know basic grammar, but apparently mnemonicians don’t.)
alviebird almost 9 years ago
Made perfect sense to me.
Varnes almost 9 years ago
Richard, popular sayings get twisted over the years….It was originally heals over head, Also, according to my dad who was born in 1904, the phrase wasn’t 23 skidoo, it was 22 skidoo and 23 skidee….meaning going quickly….
Thomas Overbeck Premium Member almost 9 years ago
Critters in my crackers, bugs on my baloney…
Carl R almost 9 years ago
Oh, I had ants in my pants one time. I stepped on a fire ant hill. The expression makes perfect sense to me now.
matzam Premium Member almost 9 years ago
a bear in your underware
matzam Premium Member almost 9 years ago
a mess in your dress
deadstick almost 9 years ago
That’s the basis of a common mnemonic for remembering the difference between stalactites and stalagmites. When you get ants in your pants, the mites go up and the tights go down…
Fido (aka Felix Rex) almost 9 years ago
“Ants in your pants” can be dealt with via a nice washing, whereas “Mites in your tights” requires a hypodermic injection series and some serious lotion in the nether regions.
Al Nala almost 9 years ago
Run back thru your sequence of comics; answers abound.
paul brians almost 9 years ago
This reminds me of the mnemonic to remember the difference between stalactites and stalagmites. It’s “ants in the pants”: the mites go up and the tights come down.
nossmf almost 9 years ago
“Talking behind my back”. Doesn’t that mean “in front of my face?”
hippogriff almost 9 years ago
Stalactites stick tight to the ceiling; stalagmites might, but since they are already on the floor, you don’t know. (And for the picky, it should be tightly; I do know basic grammar, but apparently mnemonicians don’t.)
phoenixnyc almost 9 years ago
It’s the G-rated version of “ass over teakettle”.
Caldonia almost 9 years ago
That makes no sense—it isn’t convoluted and contrived and awkward and it doesn’t make you seem unappealing!
childe_of_pan over 7 years ago
“Itchin’ like a man on a fuzzy tree, ahuh huh…..”
DKHenderson 5 days ago
Why is “ants in your pants” more sensible than “mites in your tights”? They both supply a graphic description of someone squirming.