Softly softly catchy monkey
From The Crown to King Charles III, here are the best TV shows about the British monarchy.
Quotations from the mid-nineteenth century use catch or caught the monkey. Benham's Book of Quotations suggests the phrase originated from Black English, .
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'Softly, softly, catchee monkey' is a curious idiom that's associated with the founder of the Boy Scouts.
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An old English proverb founded by a boy scout, meaning: "Don't flurry; patience gains the day". (Basically meaning be patient.).
Description:I had absolutely no ideas what the hell they were talking about, although there wasn't so much as a flicker of consternation from the Australians and Brits in the room or on the phone. I guess I shouldn't be surprised. After all, when we had a discussion about one of the British analyst's accents, I noted that she sounded exactly like the Vicar of Dibley 's ditzy friend Alice Horton, nee Tinker.
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