A Conversation for A Cup of Joe
As if people were copying and pasting
Recumbentman Started conversation Oct 10, 2003
Perish the thought! Who would be so lazy-minded . . .
How about the phrase "I feel like a cuppa, d'you?"
As if people were copying and pasting
Fragilis - h2g2 Cured My Tabular Obsession Posted Oct 11, 2003
I always assumed "cuppa" was lazy for "cup of". The original phrase, then, would have been, "I fancy a cup of coffee/tea." The last word was likely omitted out of yet more laziness. Now the speaker doesn't even have to specify what it's a cup of! How easy is that?
As if people were copying and pasting
Recumbentman Posted Oct 11, 2003
Well, yes . . . and anyway it would come out as "a cup o' dew" not Joe.
Must say I never heard the expression "a cup of Joe" . . .
As if people were copying and pasting
azahar Posted Oct 12, 2003
hi Recumbantman,
Then you have never watched old American films, usually having to do with private detectives and the like. I've also heard it called a cup of mud.
Been looking around on Google and cannot find any definitive origin for the phrase, so perhaps it will have to remain one of those mysteries, like the origin of the word 'okay'.
az
As if people were copying and pasting
Recumbentman Posted Oct 12, 2003
But it's not a mystery, az; it's well explained here.
And okay is not a mystery either; check in The Straight Dope. There's even a Guide Entry about it, though I don't think it is as persuasive as The Straight Dope.
OK stands for Orl Korrect, one of a number of jokey spellings used in American newspapers in the 1830s. Extremely well documented.
Key: Complain about this post
As if people were copying and pasting
More Conversations for A Cup of Joe
Write an Entry
"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a wholly remarkable book. It has been compiled and recompiled many times and under many different editorships. It contains contributions from countless numbers of travellers and researchers."