Sep 26, 2008 05:45
16 yrs ago
4 viewers *
English term
to give cards and spades
Non-PRO
Not for points
English
Art/Literary
Poetry & Literature
it is used ina short story . the context is:
A WOMAN RENDERED SOME SELECTIONS WHICH SHE SAID WAS OPERA, BUT WHATEVER THEY WAS MY DAUTHER COULD HAVE GIVE HER CARDS AND SPADES AND NOT MADE SUCH A HABALLOO ABOUT IT.
A WOMAN RENDERED SOME SELECTIONS WHICH SHE SAID WAS OPERA, BUT WHATEVER THEY WAS MY DAUTHER COULD HAVE GIVE HER CARDS AND SPADES AND NOT MADE SUCH A HABALLOO ABOUT IT.
Responses
+3
35 mins
Selected
beat sb, be better than sb.
I think that's what it means. Here's a definition I found (the original expression is "give cards IN spades"):
†Term from the card game called Casino. There are 11 points possible in this game (not counting "sweeps"). "Cards" (taking most tricks) counts 3 points. "Spades" (taking most of the suit) counts 1. To "give cards in spades" is, therefore, to give a 36% handicap. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,737058,00.h...
†Term from the card game called Casino. There are 11 points possible in this game (not counting "sweeps"). "Cards" (taking most tricks) counts 3 points. "Spades" (taking most of the suit) counts 1. To "give cards in spades" is, therefore, to give a 36% handicap. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,737058,00.h...
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Jack Doughty
36 mins
|
agree |
NancyLynn
: yes - cards IN spades
1 hr
|
disagree |
Gary D
: Cards and spades = accolades,
1 hr
|
agree |
David Moore (X)
: Derived I think form the expression "to give so. sth. in spades" - in other words with heavy emphasis.
6 hrs
|
agree |
jccantrell
: How I would understand this, too. Never heard "cards AND spades" in the USA.
9 hrs
|
neutral |
Demi Ebrite
: I did a little digging, please see reference comments.
15 hrs
|
Comment: "Selected automatically based on peer agreement."
2 hrs
Cards and spades = accolades, applauded her
BUT WHATEVER THEY WAS MY DAUTHER COULD HAVE GIVE HER CARDS AND SPADES AND NOT MADE SUCH A HABALLOO ABOUT IT.
Should be ::
BUT WHATEVER IT WAS MY DAUGHTER SHE COULD HAVE GIVEN HER CARDS AND SPADES AND NOT MADE SUCH A HABALLOO ABOUT IT.
Cards and spades = accolades, applauded her
HABALLOO = a big fuss, created a stir, complained a lot
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Note added at 2 hrs (2008-09-26 08:16:59 GMT)
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It is just slang. don't read too much into it. No doubt the rest of the text will have rhyming slang that means something it sounds like.
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Note added at 3 hrs (2008-09-26 09:19:32 GMT)
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BUT WHENEVER IT WAS MY DAUGHTER SHE COULD HAVE GIVEN HER CARDS AND SPADES AND NOT MADE SUCH A HABALLOO ABOUT IT.
yes or this. from Ramesh Bhatt:
BUT WHATEVER THEY WERE, MY DAUGHTER COULD HAVE GIVEN HER CARDS AND SPADES (FOR THEM/ TO THEM) AND NOT MADE ANY HULLABALOO ABOUT THEM.
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Note added at 16 hrs (2008-09-26 22:28:21 GMT)
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To come up trumps, = to come out on top, win, be the best, have a win.
Although "Trumps is a card playing term, it is also used as slang or colloquially speaking.
other examples;
a lay down marzare, a card playing term meaning win hands down.
she aced her opponent, she beat her convincingly.
he topped out with his performance, he did the very best he could do.
he hit them for a six. hit a home run with his portrayal of King Lear.
=did a great job.
he knocked them dead with a beautiful rendition of Bach. did a superb performance.
references;
http://www.archive.org/stream/thirtyseventhnat015866mbp/thir...
I have only been a disabled veteran since 1944. There are fellows in this organization that can give me cards and spades only because they have 30 years of service in the organization. But I know what is done. And I am the one making the report, so don't stop me in the hall and say to me, "Joe, our pub- licity department doesn't do anything," because I am tired of hearing it. I am giving you my report now. Bother me about something
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Note added at 17 hrs (2008-09-26 22:56:06 GMT)
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Hi, debrite we have to also think what is the opposite of HABALLOO.
haballoo is .. causing a stir, criticizing, causing a ruckus, being very critical. please refer to my posted link.
Wikipedia...The word hullabaloo is an English noun meaning an uproar or fuss.
Should be ::
BUT WHATEVER IT WAS MY DAUGHTER SHE COULD HAVE GIVEN HER CARDS AND SPADES AND NOT MADE SUCH A HABALLOO ABOUT IT.
Cards and spades = accolades, applauded her
HABALLOO = a big fuss, created a stir, complained a lot
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 2 hrs (2008-09-26 08:16:59 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
It is just slang. don't read too much into it. No doubt the rest of the text will have rhyming slang that means something it sounds like.
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 3 hrs (2008-09-26 09:19:32 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
BUT WHENEVER IT WAS MY DAUGHTER SHE COULD HAVE GIVEN HER CARDS AND SPADES AND NOT MADE SUCH A HABALLOO ABOUT IT.
yes or this. from Ramesh Bhatt:
BUT WHATEVER THEY WERE, MY DAUGHTER COULD HAVE GIVEN HER CARDS AND SPADES (FOR THEM/ TO THEM) AND NOT MADE ANY HULLABALOO ABOUT THEM.
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 16 hrs (2008-09-26 22:28:21 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
To come up trumps, = to come out on top, win, be the best, have a win.
Although "Trumps is a card playing term, it is also used as slang or colloquially speaking.
other examples;
a lay down marzare, a card playing term meaning win hands down.
she aced her opponent, she beat her convincingly.
he topped out with his performance, he did the very best he could do.
he hit them for a six. hit a home run with his portrayal of King Lear.
=did a great job.
he knocked them dead with a beautiful rendition of Bach. did a superb performance.
references;
http://www.archive.org/stream/thirtyseventhnat015866mbp/thir...
I have only been a disabled veteran since 1944. There are fellows in this organization that can give me cards and spades only because they have 30 years of service in the organization. But I know what is done. And I am the one making the report, so don't stop me in the hall and say to me, "Joe, our pub- licity department doesn't do anything," because I am tired of hearing it. I am giving you my report now. Bother me about something
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 17 hrs (2008-09-26 22:56:06 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
Hi, debrite we have to also think what is the opposite of HABALLOO.
haballoo is .. causing a stir, criticizing, causing a ruckus, being very critical. please refer to my posted link.
Wikipedia...The word hullabaloo is an English noun meaning an uproar or fuss.
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Ramesh Bhatt
2 hrs
|
Thank you
|
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disagree |
David Moore (X)
: Not any slang I've ever heard...and certainly not proper "rhyming slang"
5 hrs
|
It is colloquial speak, I hear it about 10 times a year, Maybe we need to know where the author was born and raised.
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|
neutral |
Demi Ebrite
: I don't think so, Gary. If you read the story, you may see it differently, URL in ref. His sports writing and satirical fiction were very different from one another.
13 hrs
|
being a sports writer then he would definatly have used it to term accolades, It is a commom term used in sports media.
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Reference comments
7 hrs
Reference:
The original context is from a story called "The Golden Honeymoon" by Ring Lardner, first published Cosmopolitan, 73 (July, 1922), 59-64.
Interestingly, the dialogue in this story is spoken by white, not African American persons, and the narrator is male. In the story, the card game being played is called 'Five Hundred'.
I believe the expression in question means that the daughter thinks that the woman presenting 'grand opera selections' (of music) made a big deal about it, and she, herself could have cared less....
"When we had been down there about two weeks, we spent one evening as their guest in the Congregational Church, at a social give by the Michigan Society. A talk was made by a man named Bitting of Detroit, Michigan, on How I was Cured of Story Telling. He is a big man in the Rotarians and give a witty talk.
A woman named Mrs. Oxford rendered some selections which Mrs. Hartsell said was grand opera music, but whatever they was my daughter Edie could of give her cards and spades and not made such a hullaballoo about it neither. "
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Note added at 16 hrs (2008-09-26 21:51:13 GMT)
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http://www.online-literature.com/ring-lardner/
Author: Ring Lardner
1885-1933
Sports writer and writer if satirical fiction
Interestingly, the dialogue in this story is spoken by white, not African American persons, and the narrator is male. In the story, the card game being played is called 'Five Hundred'.
I believe the expression in question means that the daughter thinks that the woman presenting 'grand opera selections' (of music) made a big deal about it, and she, herself could have cared less....
"When we had been down there about two weeks, we spent one evening as their guest in the Congregational Church, at a social give by the Michigan Society. A talk was made by a man named Bitting of Detroit, Michigan, on How I was Cured of Story Telling. He is a big man in the Rotarians and give a witty talk.
A woman named Mrs. Oxford rendered some selections which Mrs. Hartsell said was grand opera music, but whatever they was my daughter Edie could of give her cards and spades and not made such a hullaballoo about it neither. "
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Note added at 16 hrs (2008-09-26 21:51:13 GMT)
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http://www.online-literature.com/ring-lardner/
Author: Ring Lardner
1885-1933
Sports writer and writer if satirical fiction
Peer comments on this reference comment:
agree |
David Moore (X)
: Writer "of" satirical...well researched! I think this is not to be taken as "good" English in any case, so the expression (mis)quoted is also clearly wrong; look at "could of given", for example, to see that the speaker is totally uneducated.
21 hrs
|
Thank you, David. Lardner wrote several pieces such as this one, poking fun at a particular class of Americans around the turn of the 20th century.
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Discussion
http://www.archive.org/stream/thirtyseventhnat015866mbp/thir...
There are fellows in this organization that can give me cards and spades only because they have 30 years of service in the organization. His peers can applaud
Bridge is the biggest card game in the world as Retired people play it. A bit like lawn bowls
According to your theory, What then does this mean? "AND NOT MADE SUCH A HABALLOO ABOUT IT" because it is the opposite to "cards and spades"
a spade is a different form of shovel, hand implement for moving dirt, etc
spadeful= The quantity a shovel can hold