Fickle Finger of Fate (2024)

A young woman wants a family-friendly way to describe a statement that’s fraudulent or bogus, but all the words she can think of sound old-fashioned. Is there a better term than malarkey, poppycock, or rubbish? Also, listeners step up to help a caller looking for a succinct way to explain that a brain injury sometimes makes it hard for her to remember words. Also in this episode: you may remember the Flying Fickle Finger of Fate awarded on the television show Laugh-In. It turns out that the phrase fickle finger of fate is decades older than that!This episode first aired November 19, 2016.

Language of Elevators

Door dwell, hoistway, and terminal landing are all terms from the jargon of elevator design and maintenance.

Jumbo Bologna

If you hear someone use the word jumbo for “bologna,” it’s a good bet they’re from Pittsburgh or somewhere nearby in southwestern Pennsylvania. A regional company, Isaly’s, sold a brand of lunchmeat with that name.

It’s Academic at this Point

Why do we say something is academic when referring to a question or topic that’s theoretical?

Boy’s Lif e Humor

The “Think and Grin” section of Boy’s Life magazine has some pretty silly humor, especially in issues from the 1950’s.

Steam that Blows the Whistle Never Turns the Wheel

A listener in Burlington, Vermont, remembers being punished as a youngster for talking during class. His teacher forced him to write out this proverb dozens of times: “For those who talk, and talk, and talk, this proverb may appeal. The steam that blows the whistle will never turn the wheel.” Translation: If you’re talking, then you’re not getting work done.

PRE Quiz

Quiz Guy John Chaneski’s puzzle requires misreading words that begin with the letters P-R-E. For example, the word preaching could be misread as having to do with “hurting beforehand” — that is, pre-aching.

A Better Word for Malarkey

A young woman from Portland, Oregon, seeks a noun to denote something fake or otherwise dubious. She doesn’t want an obvious swear word, but also doesn’t like the ones she found in the thesaurus. She thinks malarkey, poppycock, and flim-flam sound too old-fashioned and unnatural for a twenty-something to say. Fraud, fake, hoax, janky, don’t sound quite right for her either. The hosts suggest chicanery, sham, rubbish, bogus, or crap.

Revert, Meaning Get Back To

A San Diego, California, listener is curious about a colleagues’ use of “I’ll revert” to mean “I’ll get back to you.”

Bob Marley Quote

Regarding suffering caused by others, singer Bob Marley had this to say: “The truth is, everyone is going to hurt you. You just got to find the ones worth suffering for.”

Put Up Your Dukes

“Put up your dukes!” means “Get ready to fight!” But its etymology is a bit uncertain. One story goes that it’s from Cockney rhyming slang, in which dukes is short for Dukes of York, a play on the slang term fork, meaning “hand.” But the phrase more likely originated from or was influenced by a Romany word involving hands.

Goobers are Peanuts

Why do we call a peanut a goober? The word comes from the Bantu languages of East Africa.

An Ephelis is a Freckle

If you need a synonym for freckle, there’s always the word ephelis, from ancient Greek for “nail stud.”

Explaining Why Words Won’t Come

Listeners step up to help a caller from an earlier show who was seeking a succinct way to explain that a brain injury sometimes makes it difficult for her to remember words.

Haint

Primarily in the southern United States, the word haint refers to a ghost or supernatural being, such as a poltergeist. Haint is almost certainly a variant of haunt.

Pretty Adverb

The word pretty, used to modify an adjective, as in pretty good or pretty bad, has strayed far from its etymological roots, which originally had to do with being “cunning” or “crafty.”

Penny for Your Thoughts

Here’s something to think about the next time somebody says “A penny for your thoughts.”

Fickle Finger of Fate Origins

The television show Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-I n,” popular in the late 1960’s and early 1970’s, was famous for awarding its goofy trophy, the Flying Fickle Finger of Fate. But the term fickle finger of fate is actually decades older than that.

Tunket

Tunket is a euphemism for “hell,” as in, “Where in tunket did I put my car keys?” No one knows its origin or where your keys are.

This episode is hosted by Martha Barnette and Grant Barrett, and produced by Stefanie Levine.

Music Used in the Episode

TitleArtistAlbumLabel
Rise Of The EastSure Fire Soul Ensemble Out On The CoastColemine Records
Balboa ParkSure Fire Soul Ensemble Out On The CoastColemine Records
Ain’t She SweetRoger Rivas and The Brothers Of Reggae Last GoodbyeRivas Recordings
Baja NorteSure Fire Soul Ensemble Out On The CoastColemine Records
Tche!Sure Fire Soul Ensemble Out On The CoastColemine Records
Heading WestRoger Rivas and The Brothers Of Reggae Last GoodbyeRivas Recordings
Sunny Santa AnaSure Fire Soul Ensemble Out On The CoastColemine Records
Jeannie’s GetdownSure Fire Soul Ensemble Out On The CoastColemine Records
Volcano VapesSure Fire Soul Ensemble Out On The CoastColemine Records

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Fickle Finger of Fate (2024)

FAQs

What does the idiom fickle finger of fate mean? ›

the fickle finger of fate

(informal) The unpredictable nature of fate, sometimes helping and sometimes hindering.

What does the finger fickle mean? ›

Fickle, by definition, means changeable, not steady. Fate is a predestination of of something undetermined but inevitable. The Fickle Finger of Fate points out that something ominous or may happen in future without determination of a specific time frame.

How do you use fickle finger of fate in a sentence? ›

Ah, looks like the flying fickle finger of fate came back to haunt her.

Who awarded the Flying Fickle Finger of Fate? ›

Let's be blunt. Did NBC give Star Trek the finger? On September 16, 1968, four days before Star Trek's third season premiere of “Spock's Brain”, the second season opener of NBC's Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In featured the very first Flying Fickle Finger of Fate award.

What is the meaning of fate finger? ›

English has a number of words to refer to typographic mistakes, but there's one that we've been seeing more and more of in print: fat-finger. 'Fat-finger' originally referred to a method of intentionally and haphazardly hitting phone buttons. These days, it's a verb that means "to mistype something."

What is the irony of fate idiom? ›

Cosmic irony is sometimes called irony of fate. It is the idea that human fate and destiny is controlled by outside forces, even gods, who do not care about humans or their hopes and dreams.

What is a synonym for fickle fate? ›

Synonyms of 'fickleness' in British English
  • inconstancy.
  • volatility.
  • unpredictability.
  • capriciousness. the capriciousness of Fate.
  • mutability.
  • unsteadiness.
  • flightiness.
  • fitfulness.
Oct 30, 2020

What is an example of fickle? ›

likely to change your opinion or your feelings suddenly and without a good reason: She's so fickle - she's never been interested in the same man for more than a week!

What is a good example of fate? ›

noun. Her fate was to remain in exile. The villain met his fate at the hands of the hero. Congress decided the bill's fate by a single vote.

What does weird twist of fate mean? ›

phrase. If something happens by a twist of fate, it happens by chance, and it is strange, interesting, or unfortunate in some way.

What does the idiom sure as fate mean? ›

sure as fate (not comparable) (simile) surely; with certainty.

What does the idiom fingertips mean? ›

If you say that something is at your fingertips, you approve of the fact that you can reach it easily or that it is easily available to you. [approval] I had the information at my fingertips and hadn't used it. See full dictionary entry for fingertip.

What does the idiom give the finger mean? ›

give (someone) the finger in American English

slang. to express contempt for by or as by the obscene gesture of pointing the middle finger upward while folding the other fingers against the palm. See full dictionary entry for finger. Most material © 2005, 1997, 1991 by Penguin Random House LLC.

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