********* http://tinyurl.com/5kfwcz *********
Is the soundtrack to this post - there's a reason.
On the way home from work today I was thinking about a pint of beer.
Which is no unusual state of affairs, but this time I was pondering the etymology of the pint in question.
"Does," I wondered, "the verb 'to cane' (most common usage 'we were caned' or 'he's a caner') derive from Liverpool's very own 'Cains' beer?"
Caners are a breed of their own according to The Sun, and just like that other incomprehensible, monosyllabic, dribbling group - premiership footballers - they have their own league. See: http://tinyurl.com/66nnpj
Chugging through Birkdale and Sandhills I tried to get to the bottom of the question: To get caned do you need to be drinking Cains?
Because if that's the case we're all going to be sobering up very soon. Last week the tax man called time, RBS handed the beleaguered brewery over to the receivers and the long hangover began.
Now, there is another school of thought that argues the root of the verb is cocaine, or 'caine if you're really cool.
Which makes me wonder, has the government really thought this thing through? Do they want good sup-standing Cains drinkers to become coke fiends whose nostrils harbour half of Columbia just because there's a £4.2m financing shortfall?
How much did bankrolling Northern Rock cost?
Surely it's time for a private members bill in parliament calling for the nationalisation of Cains before we all end up in a worse state than Ms Winehouse because we've had to swap a nice pint for class A substance abuse in order to carry on getting caned?
Showing posts with label etymology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label etymology. Show all posts
Monday, 11 August 2008
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