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ZombieDarwin 8 year s ago
#21 FFS! The needle being referenced to is not a knitting needle, as pictured! The needle is the name of the very small door in the large gate that controls access to a town or castle. When the gate was closed, the only way in or out of the town was through this very small gate, just barely big enough for an adult male to squeeze through. At the time, camels would enter the town laden down with goods, doubling or even tripling their width. Thus, the typical camel would be unable to go through the needle unladen, and absolutely impossible for a fully laden camel to do so.
       
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Funny 5 year s ago
#7 Wrong. The phrase predates the First World War by around a hundred years.
       
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yahooshoot

Three sheets to the wind

To be very drunk.

Apparently it references not having the sails on a ship correctly fastened. The ‘sheets’ refer to the ropes holding the sails in place and when a ship becomes hard to control it is ‘to the wind’.

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Where Do Well Known Expressions Come From?
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