Yes they were used to flog sailors in the old days when they disobeyed an order ,the sailor would have to make his own and if he recieved a large number of lashes 100+ he would possibly die .there is a huge ammount I could say on the subject but my typing is not good .The knot on the end of the tails is the blood knot for obvious reasons and we use this today as a stopper knot.
The sayings :- Has the cat got your tonge , so small you couldn't swing a cat all originate from the cat o'nine tails.
:why:
Question: Why dont people use the tarbuck knot for their tarps?
Yes , you are absolutly correct they did .
The sayings :- Has the cat got your tonge , so small you couldn't swing a cat all originate from the cat o'nine tails.
:why:
Yes , you are absolutly correct they did .
The sayings :- Has the cat got your tonge , so small you couldn't swing a cat all originate from the cat o'nine tails.
:why:
Maybe the origin of the saying ;
Who let the cat out of the bag,- indicating trouble to come.
The Cat-O-Nine tails from what I heard, was kept in a bag, possibly red in colour.
The idea was that the man selling the pig would show you the pig, then offer to put in in a sack for you, he'd pretend to search for a sack at the back of his stall, and swap the pig for something else. If you didn't check the poke you'd not know that you'd been 'sold a pup' until it was too late.Who would buy a piglet without seeing it?
The idea was that the man selling the pig would show you the pig, then offer to put in in a sack for you, he'd pretend to search for a sack at the back of his stall, and swap the pig for something else. If you didn't check the poke you'd not know that you'd been 'sold a pup' until it was too late.