We’d also be interested in your comments about this book. If you would like a reply, a self-addressed, stamped envelope will assure one.
So send those words, phrases, and comments, along with your name, address, and telephone number, to:
DAVID FELDMAN
P.O. BOX 116/PLANETARIUM STATION
NEW YORK, NY 10024-0116
Searchable Terms
All wool and a yard wide
Allemande
Amok
Ampersand
Apache dance
At loggerheads
Atlas
Attorney-at-law
Ax to grind
Back and fill
Barbecue
Batfowling
Battle royal
Bears [stock market]
Beating around the bush
Bedlam
Berserk
Beyond the pale
Bimonthly
Birdie
Birthday suit
Bitter end
Biweekly
Blackmail
Blockhead
Blue jeans
Blue moon
Blue streak
Blurb
Bobbies [London officers]
Bobby pins
Bogey
Booze
Brass tacks
Break a leg
Buck
Bulls [stock market]
Bunkum
Butterfly
Cab
Caddy
Cadet
Can’t hold a candle
Capital punishment
Capitalization [puncuation]
Cat out of the bag
Catercorner
Cats and dogs, raining
Catsup
Cattycorner
Checkmate
Chicken tetrazzini
Chops
Chowderhead
Claptrap
Cloud nine
Cob/cobweb
Coleslaw
Collins, Tom [bartender]
Cooties
Cop
Corny
Couth
Craps
Crisscross
Cut and dried
Cut the mustard
Dandelion
Deaf and dumb
Deep-six
Discussing Uganda
Dixie
Dixieland
Do-re-mi
Dog days
Doozy
Doubleheader
Drawing a bead on
Driveway
Dukes
Dumb [mute]
Dumbbells
Eagle [golf score]
Earmark
Easy as pie
Eavesdropping
Eggs Benedict
Eighty-six
Eleventh hour
Fan [loyal partisan]
Filibuster
Filthy lucre
Fin [five dollar bill]
Fink
Flak
Flash in the pan
Flea market
Fortnight
Freebooter
Fry
Fullback
Funk
Gerrymander
Get the sack
Get your goat
Getting down to brass tacks
G.I.
Goat
Gobbledygook
Grape-nuts
Gravy train
Green with envy
Greenhorn
Gunny sacks
Guy
Habit [riding costume]
Hackles
Halfback
Ham [actor]
Hamfatter
Hansom cab
Hazard [dice game]
Head [bathroom]
Head honcho
Heart on his sleeve
Hector
Heebie jeebies
Hem and haw
Hep
Heroin
High jinks
Highball
Hillbilly
Hip
Hobnob
Hobson’s choice
Hold a candle
Holding the bag
Honcho
Honky
Hoodwink
Hoosiers
Horsefeathers
Hotsy totsy
Hue and cry
Humble pie
I [capitalization of]
I could care less
In like Flynn
In the nick of time
Indian corn
Indian pudding
Indian summer
Jack [playing card]
Jaywalking
Jeans [pants]
Jeep
Jerkers
Jig is up
Jink
Joshing
Juggernaut
K rations
Keeping up with the Joneses
Ketchup
Kettle of fish
Kidnapping
Kit cat club
Kittycorner
Knock on wood
Knuckle down
Knuckle under
Ladybug
Lame duck
Last ditch
Last straw
Lawyer
Lb. [pound]
Leap year
Left wing
Let the cat out of the bag
Licking his chops
Limelight
Lobster Newburg
Loggerheads
Lollipop
Long in the tooth
Loo
Love Jones
Lucre
Lynching
Make no bones about it
Mind your P’s and Q’s
Mrs.
Mugwump
Muumuu
Namby-pamby
Nick of time
Nickname
Nine-day wonder
No bones about it
Off the schneider
On tenterhooks
On the Q.T.
Once in a blue moon
One fell swoop
Pacific Ocean
Pantywaist
Pap test
Par [golf score]
Pardon my French
Parkway
Pass the buck
Pea jacket
Peeping Tom
Peter out
Pig in a poke
Pin money
Pink lady
Pinkie
Pipe down
Pop goes the weasel
Port
Porthole
Potter’s field
Pretty kettle of fish
Pretty picnic
P’s and Q’s
Put up your dukes
Q.T.
Quack [doctor]
Quarterback
Rx
Raining cats and dogs
Raise hackles
Read the riot act
Real McCoys
Red cent
Red herring
Red-letter day
Red tape
Rigmarole
Right wing
Riot Act [1716]
Run amok
Sacked [fired]
St. Martin’s Day
Salad days
Sawbuck (ten-dollar bill)
Schneider
Scot-free
Scotland Yard
Seed [tournament ranking]
Semimonthly
Semiweekly
Shoofly pie
Short shrift
Shrift
Shrive
Siamese twins
Sideburns
Skidoo
Small fry
Soda jerk
Son of a gun
Spic and span
Starboard
Stolen thunder
Sundae
Swan song
Talking a blue streak
Taw
Teetotaler
Tenterhooks
&
nbsp; Ten-foot pole
That’s all she wrote
Third degree
Third world
Three sheets to the wind
Tinker’s dam
Toady
Toast [salute]
Tom Collins [drink]
Tommy gun
Twenty-three skidoo
Uncouth
Upper crust
Waffling
Wear his heart on his sleeve
Weasel words
White elephant
X ray
XXX [liquor]
Zipper
Acknowledgments
Shortly after I signed my first book contract at Harper & Row, my editor, Rick Kot, took me to meet Barbara Rittenhouse and Mark Landau in the Special Marketing department. Although it was a friendly visit at first, the three of them proceeded to tie me to an easy chair with some spare hemp that was lying around Barbara’s office. At first I feared violence, but soon I found out that the purpose of the abduction was to elucidate the Master Plan the three of them had charted for me. You are now reading step one of the Master Plan.
This book would not have been written if Rick, Barbara, and Mark hadn’t generously given me the idea. Nor could it have been written if they hadn’t, in a compassionate moment, untied me.
Others at Harper & Row have helped me enormously, without the need for physical props. Publisher Bill Shinker has been encouraging and enthusiastic. Everyone in the Special Marketing and Publicity departments has been wonderful to me. Special thanks to Joann diGennaro, who arranged my last publicity tour and lived to tell about it. Elisheva Urbas has helped with so many problems, big and small, with such good cheer, that my hair has temporarily stopped graying. Connie Levinson has been a constant source of support and humor.
Thanks, as always, to my friend, agent, and man of the world, Jim Trupin; to Kas Schwan, for her terrific illustrations and friendship; to Mark Kohut, for his encouragement and counsel; and to my friends and family, for their love.
About the Author
David Feldman is the author of the ImponderablesTM series–Why Do Clocks Run Clockwise? When Do Fish Sleep?, Why Do Dogs Have Wet Noses?, and Do Penguins Have Knees?–as well as Who Put The Butter In Butterfly? and How to Win as Just About Everything. He has a master’s degree in popular culture from Bowling Green State University in Ohio and consults and lectures on the media. He lives in New York City.
Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins authors
Other Books by David Feldman
Imponderables™
How to Win at Just About Everything
Why Do Clocks Run Clockwise?
and Other Imponderables™
When Do Fish Sleep?
and Other Imponderables™
of Everyday Life
Why Do Dogs Have Wet Noses?
and Other Imponderables™
of Everyday Life
Do Penguins Have Knees?
An Imponderables™ Book
Credits
Designed by Cassandra J. Pappas
Copyright
WHO PUT THE BUTTER IN BUTTERFLY ?. Copyright © 1989 by David Feldman. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
EPub Edition © FEBRUARY 2006 ISBN: 9780061856464
Library of Congress has catalogued the hardcover edition as follows:
Feldman, David, 1950-
Who put the butter in butterfly?
Bibliography: p.
ISBN 0-06-016072-1
ISBN 0-06-091661-3
30 29
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1 The City Road is a major thoroughfare in London.
2 The Eagle was a real pub and popular watering hole in London.
3 Slang for “pawn.”
4 Slang for a tailor’s iron.
Who Put the Butter in Butterfly? Page 12