Go to grass
Posted by R. Berg on August 26, 2001
In Reply to: Grass posted by tia on August 26, 2001
: I am trying to find out what the meaning of "go to grass" means
: thanks for any info.
: tia
Eric Partridge, Dictionary of Catch Phrases: American and British, from the Sixteenth Century to the Present Day, has an entry for this:
"'go to grass!' is, said Hotten in 1859, 'a common answer to a troublesome or inquisitive person': obsolete by . . . 1900 in UK, it lingered in US until c. 1920, and in Aus. so late as the 1940s. Said to have been orig. US. Perhaps from putting an old horse out to grass."
But in current use it MIGHT mean to deteriorate, as a garden goes to grass (weeds) when not tended--just my opinion.
- Go to grass and eat hay. Bruce Kahl 08/27/01
- Go to grass and eat hay. Jim Webster 08/29/01
- Leave already!! ESC 08/30/01
- Go to grass and eat hay. Jim Webster 08/29/01