What does ballin the jack mean




















To do so requires great accuracy, and assuming the game is scored for money instead of points it is a drinking game, and takes skill and a bit of luck as well , takes risk as well, for in double or triple team play, you only get one shot one ball per player.

Thanks to Nasmichael for this info! Dear Slang City: 1. I hope it's not gross. And Ballin' the Jack was referred to in a Chuck Berry song - I don't remember the title, something about school days. The line was "we were balling the jack, but were all back in place when the teacher got back.

There were two steel balls on a centrifuge-type mechanism. When the balls swung out to a preset point controlled by the engineer by centrifugal force, it would automatically decrease the power, thus maintaining a constant speed. I believe the expression "Balls to the wall" meaning full speed came from this. Cost of Slang and Immoral Dances There is no cost so dear as the price of slang and immorality seen enacted upon the stage by brazen, illegitimate performers, who vaguely think the applause of a few noisy rowdies is an endorsement that will meet the approval of managers who forfeit their pride and disregard the welfare of children for the sake of revenue only.

The actor who swears too much is a nuisance. Some theaters don't allow it at all. But when it comes to smutty slang managers should not allow it: actors should be watched and chided and the limit of the law regarded. Stories that suggest ill repute are especially offensive. It is quite the same with suggestive dances.

The shivering bodice, twitching of the shoulders, centralized emotion and balling the jack are all sufficient reason for the revoking of any manager's license. The writer doesn't explain the expression "balling the jack"—he assumes his readers already know what it means, and that they understand why he considers it obscene.

Am I justified in concluding that the original meaning of "balling the jack" must have been something quite different from what is described in the song? To go fast said esp. A Book of Railroad Terms, W. Bill Wood. Word highball originated from old-time ball signal on post, raised aloft by pully when track was clear.

A very few of these are still in service, in New England and elsewhere. What does "balling the jack" mean and what is its origin? I hope it's not gross To answer your first question…you can find later uses of the expression [ballin the jack] where it has a sexual meaning, similar to "balling" having sex. For example, in the s, blues artist Big Bill Broonzy sang: My baby's coming home.

I hope that she won't fail because I feel so good, I feel so good. You know I feel so good, feel like balling the jack. Well, he could be talking about dancing… but maybe not. Several suggested jacks have been guessed to be the to be the source of 'balling the jack', but without any evidence to make them likely candidates. Without looking at each jack in turn I'll say at the outset that the front runner is the use of 'jack' as the name of a locomotive in the USA in the early 20th century.

This is recorded in Frank C. Brown's Collection of North Carolina Folklore , in a work song of firemen on locomotives, which he collected in I got a southern jack, I got a southern jack, First thing I do shovel in the coal, Next thing I do watch the drivers roll, I got a southern jack, I got a southern jack, All aboard on the southern jack! The derivation of that meaning of jack is that the 'iron horse' was the 'jackass that pulled the wagons'.

The 'balling' part of the phrase also comes from US railroad terminology. In the 19th and early 20th centuries US railway traffic was controlled by signals using balls on vertical wires, on a kind of flagpole arrangement. If the driver saw a 'high ball' he could start or proceed at speed.

I want the listener to hear it but also feel it! Muscle Shoals, Alabama was where I needed to record to get that sound. Enter Your Email Address. August 17, One Comment.



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