List of idioms of improbability
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There are many idioms of improbability, used to denote that something is impossible or unlikely to occur.
In English
- Flying pig
- A flying pig is a symbol of an impossible event coming to pass. The popular saying "[it will happen] when pigs fly" (or when pigs have wings) is traditionally used to mean that the specified event will never occur.
- Cold hell
- Rises from the general belief that hell is an extremely hot place. Expressions include "When hell freezes over", "A cold day in hell", "Satan will be ice-skating to work", and "A snowball's chance in hell".
- If wishes were horses, beggars would ride
- Once in a blue moon
- In a month of Sundays
- Twelfth of Never
- "I'll eat my hat"
- "Let me be struck by lightning"
- The Chicago Cubs winning the World Series (now a former idiom, as the Cubs defeated the Cleveland Indians to win the 2016 World Series.)
In other languages
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
- Afrikaans uses the expression as die perde horings kry meaning "when horses grow horns".
- Albanian has the expression ne 36 gusht - (on August 36) to show something that is impossible to happen.
- Arabic has a wide range of idioms differing from a region to another. In some Arab countries of the Persian Gulf people would say "إذا حجت البقرة على قرونها", which literally means "when the cow goes on pilgrimage on its horns" to express impossibility. In Egypt, they say "في المشمش", meaning "when the apricots bloom". Other Arab people -mainly Palestinian- use the expression "لما ينور الملح", which roughly translates into "when salt glows", which is futile because salt isn't a glowing material.
- Chinese uses the expression 太陽從西邊升起 meaning "when the sun rises in the West".
- Czech language uses the expression Až naprší a uschne meaning "Till the rain will not dry". Or other expression which Czechs use is "Až opadá listí z dubu", meaning "Till the leaves are not going to fall from oak"
- In Dutch, the expression is "met Sint-juttemis, or when Pentecost and Easter are on the same day: Als Pinksteren en Pasen op één dag vallen .
- In Esperanto, the expression is je la tago de Sankta Neniam, which means "on Saint Never's Day".
- In Finnish, the expression is sitten kun lehmät lentävät - when the cows fly. Also jos lehmällä olisi siivet, se lentäisi (if cow had wings, it would fly), implying futile speculations. Also kun lipputanko kukkii (when flagpole blossoms) and Tuohikuussa Pukin-päivän aikaan - in Barkember on St. Buck's day (implying an imaginary month and imaginary day). Sometimes also kun Helvetti jäätyy ("when Hell freezes over"), although saying it aloud to someone is considered very rude and hostile.
- In French, the expression is à la Saint-Glinglin (on Saint Glinglin's day). Glinglin is a nonsense rhyme for saint. Another expression is La semaine des quatres jeudis (the week of the four Thursdays) as in "that will happen (or not) during the week of the four Thursdays" (Thursday was the break in the school's week). Another expression is quand les poules auront des dents (when hens have teeth). The expression aux calendes grecques (to the Greek Calends) is also used for indefinite postponement, since "calendes" is a Roman feast.
- In German "Wenn Schweine fliegen können!" is identical with the English saying "when pigs fly", although the older proverb "Wenn Schweine Flügel hätten, wäre alles möglich" (if pigs had wings, everything would be possible) is in more common use, often edited on the second part to something impossible, like "if pigs had wings, even your idea might work". Another phrase is "Am Sankt-Nimmerleins-Tag" (on St. Never's Day).
- In Georgian "როცა ვირი ხეზე ავა" (When the donkey climbs the tree).
- In Hebrew, a common idiom expressing improbability is "when hair grows on the palm of my hand" ("כשיצמחו שיערות על כף ידי"), a part of the human body where hair never grows. Another is a legal term, referring to the postponing of a case, "until Moses returns."
- In Hungarian the two most often used expressions are "Majd ha piros hó esik" and "Majd ha cigánygyerekek potyognak az égből". The former is literally "When it's snowing red snowflakes", the latter: "When gypsy children are streaming from the sky". There is a third one: "Majd ha fagy" literally meaning "When it freezes". It's the short version of "Majd ha a pokol befagy", which literally means "When hell freezes over", but isn't used anymore. Another one: "holnapután kiskedden" which literally means "on the less holy[1] Tuesday after tomorrow".
- Latin had the expression "ad kalendas graecas" (to the Greek Kalends) for indefinite postponement. The Greek calendar had no calends.
- In Limburgish, the expression is "Te Pruimpaschen, als de kalveren op 't ijs dansen" (usually shortened to just "met Sint-juttemis"), meaning "on Saint-juttemis day, when the calves are dancing on the ice". This Saint-juttemis is usually thought to be a fictional saint in the vein of Saint Glinglin but is in fact real (St. Judith in English). Therefore Sint-juttemis day is an actual day (the 17th of August) and this makes saying just "on Saint-juttemis day" when you mean never a prime example of irony. The adding of the phrase "when the calves are dancing on the ice" is what makes the phrase impossible, because it never freezes on the 17th of August in the Netherlands.
- In Lombard (Milanese dialect) the expression for something never occurring is "Quand pìssen i òch", which literally translates "When the geese will piss". The idiom refers to the popular belief that a goose never urinates.
- In Malay, the expression is "menunggu kucing bertanduk", meaning "to wait until a horned cat walks by".
- In Malayalam, the expression is "കാക്ക മലർന്നു പറക്കും" ("kākka malarnnu paṟakkuṃ"), "[the] crow will fly upside down".[2]
- In Marathi, the expression is "आत्याबाईं ना मिश्या असत्या तर काका म्हंटले असते" (Ãtyābāiḥ nā mishyā asatyā tar kākã mhaṭalā asatā) meaning, "if aunt (here: father's sister) grows moustaches she would be called uncle" [3]
- In Persian, the expression is "وقت گل نی" (vaght e gol e ney) - "when the reed plant blossoms".
- In Piedmontese (Turin dialect), an unlikely event will occur in the "smana dij tre giòbia" (the "week with three Thursdays").
- In Polish: na święty Nigdy ("till St. Never's Day"); zobaczysz... jak świnia niebo ("you'll see sth like a pig will see the heaven"); prędzej mi kaktus na dłoni wyrośnie ("sooner will a cactus grow on my palm"); (pulling down the lower eyelid of an eye) Jedzie mi tu pociąg? ("Is a train running here on me?").
- In Portuguese, equivalent expressions are "no dia de São Nunca" ("on Saint Never's day"), "nem que a vaca tussa" ("not even if the cow coughs"), "quando os porcos voarem" ("when pigs fly") and "quando as galinhas tiverem dentes" ("when chickens have teeth").[4]
- In Russian, the expression is "когда рак на горе свистнет" (kogdá rak na goré svístnet) - "when the crawfish whistles on the mountain".
- In Serbian, one expression is "кад на врби роди грожђе" (kad na vrbi rodi grožđe) - "when willow bears grapes". Another variant is "кад на врби засврби"(kad na vrbi zasvrbi) - "when willow get itchy". Note rhyme in vrbi zasvrbi. "Мало сутра" - (malo sutra) literally "a little bit tomorrow" has a similar meaning as "all my eye".
- In Seychellois Creole, also known as Kreol or Seselwa (creole spoken in Seychelles) the expression "lannen de mil zanmen" is used, which means "year two thousand and never". It is a fairly new expression used mainly among the youth.
- in Slovene, the phrase "Ob svetem Nikoli" is a wordplay that literally means "On St. Nicholas' feast day". The word "nikoli", when stressed on the second syllable means "never", when stressed on the first it is the locative case of "Nikola", i.e. Nicholas.
- In Spanish, something that will never happen is often referred to as "cuando las vacas vuelen" ("when cows fly"). Its most common use is in response to an affirmative statement, for example "I saw Mrs. Smith exercising, I swear!" to which the response given would be something like, "Yeah right, and cows fly." Other variations slightly fallen into disuse include "cuando las ranas crien pelo" (when frogs grow hair) and "cuando San Juan agache el dedo" (when Saint John bends his finger). The latter one is a reference to the common depiction of St. John with one or two extended fingers.
- In Tagalog, the vernacular is "kapag namuti ang uwak, kapag nangitim ang tagak" - (when the crow turns white, when the egret turns black). Note the euphony between the nouns uwak and tagak.
- In Turkish, one expression is "balık kavağa çıktığında" (when the fish climbs the poplar tree). Another one is "çıkmaz ayın son Çarşambasında" (at the last Wednesday of the endless month)
- In Ukrainian the expression is "коли рак на горі свисне" (koly rak no hori svysne) - "when the crawfish whistles on the mountain" or a longer variant "коли рак на горі свисне, а риба заспіває" (koly rak no hori svysne, a ryba zaspivaye) - "when the crawfish whistles on the mountain and fish sings". Another expression which is used to express impossibility to see something is "не бачити тобі ... як своїх вух" ("you'll never see sth like you will never see your ears").
See also
- Black swan theory, a term developed by Nassim Taleb to label unexpected, rare events
- Adynaton
References
- ↑ "kiskedd" is fictional counterpart of "nagykedd" ie. Holy Tuesday
- ↑ "When pigs fly / When hell freezes over".
- ↑ Scribby (7 May 2010). "Retro".
- ↑ "'Nem que a vaca tussa' governo mexe no 13º e nas férias, afirma Dilma - 17/09/2014 - Poder - Folha de S.Paulo".
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