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Our American Stories

“Knock on Wood” & “Kick the Bucket”: The Wonderful Origins of Everyday Expressions (Pt. 11)

Our American Stories

iHeartPodcasts

Society & Culture, Documentary

4.6817 Ratings

🗓️ 20 March 2026

⏱️ 10 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this episode of Our American Stories, as part of his ongoing series on the origins of everyday expressions, Andrew Thompson, author of Hair of the Dog to Paint the Town Red, shares the fascinating backstories behind the phrases “knock on wood” and “kick the bucket,” among others. These familiar sayings carry histories shaped by religion, literature, and everyday life in earlier centuries. Thompson traces how these expressions traveled through time, how their meanings shifted, and why they continue to resonate in modern speech.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is an I-Heart podcast.

0:02.5

Guaranteed Human.

0:14.0

This is Lee Habib, and this is our American stories, and we tell stories about everything here on this show.

0:26.6

And up next, we continue with our recurring series about the curious origins of everyday sayings.

0:27.6

Here to join us again is Andrew Thompson as he continues to share another slice from his ultimate

0:34.1

guide to understanding these mini mysteries of the English language.

0:38.3

It's a Funny All World is an expression indicating an acceptance of or resignation to a situation

0:46.3

and it was first used in the 1934 comedy film You're Telling Me.

0:51.3

That film starred WC Fields and at one point he says it's a funny old world.

0:57.3

A man is lucky if he gets out alive. The popularity of Fields quickly made the expression

1:02.7

commonplace and it's been quoted ever since most notably by the British Prime Minister Margaret

1:08.0

Thatcher after her decision to quit politics in 1990.

1:12.0

Alluding to the fact that she'd never lost an election in her life, yet had been forced to stand down,

1:16.9

she said, it's a funny old world, isn't it?

1:20.8

It's all Greek to me means unable to understand something or something doesn't make sense.

1:26.0

And it originates from the medieval Latin

1:28.7

proverb which means it is Greek, it cannot be read. The phrase was used by monk's scribes at the time

1:35.0

as they copied manuscripts in monastic libraries. Knowledge of the Greek language was dwindling and very

1:41.3

few people could read it. The expression is yet another one that was brought into widespread usage by Shakespeare

1:47.3

in his 1599 play Julius Caesar, which contains the line,

1:52.3

but for my own part it was Greek to me.

1:56.6

The expression John Hancock, to mean a signature,

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