This question is Not Answered
2 Followers
Latest post Mon, Jul 21 2008 7:33 AM by Anonymous. 4 replies.
Suggest an answer | | |
Anonymous  +  357131 Sat, 28 Apr 07 06:18 PM
Hi,
could someone explain to me the meaning of this "mullygrubs" I have found reading Steinbeck's "Travels with Charley"?:
'We'd be lousy esplorers. A few days out and we get the mullygrubs.'

Thanks in advance, Jo
Conchita57  +  357153 Sat, 28 Apr 07 07:45 PM
'Mulligrubs' seems to be a cousin of 'collywobbles'!  They both mean 'colic' or 'stomach ache'.

Here is an interesting explanation:

http://www.worldwidewords.org/weirdwords/ww-mul1.htm




Joined on Sat, Mar 10 2007
Madrid, Iberian Peninsula
Full Member 315
In the beginning was the word.
Stannum  +  357218 Sat, 28 Apr 07 11:34 PM

G'day Anon,

A mullygrub or mullygrubber is a cricket term.

It refers to a ball bowled that is so tragic that it just rolls along the ground.

The most famous mullygrub ever bowled was by Trevor Chappell against N.Z. in 1981.  Google 'underarm bowling'.

A mullygrub is a ball that is rolled along the ground so that the batsman can not score more than one run.  It is a sign of a defeated bowler bereft of ideas and resorting to any method to win with no consideration given to the long term ramifications of the actions.

Mully is a variant of muley which refers to cattle with no horns.  This shows the lack of danger in the mulligrubber.  It is just a 'blah' ball.

Stannum

Joined on Fri, Oct 28 2005
Melbourne Australia
Regular Member 526
Anonymous, 1 yr 152 days ago
My mother used to say this all the time.  It means you are going through the "blues" or a short depression.
Anonymous, 346 days ago
I presume that Steinbeck meant a feeling of gloominess.
For Australians it means what the person said was the way a ball was bowled in cricket.
However for some of us older folk it means a type of native grub of the bush that live in the ground much like a witchety grub, whereby you can catch them by poking a piece of grass down the hole and waiting for the grub to try to remove it and swiftly extracting the grass blade so as to 'catch' the mullygrub on the end.
Hours were spent like that when waiting for parents and to kill time.

XING

© MediaCet Ltd. 2009. All content posted by our users is a contribution to the public domain, this does not include imported usenet posts.*
For web related enquires please contact us on webmaster@mediacet.com.
*Usenet post removal: You may not have understood that your posts would end up in the public domain. Please contact us with proof of the poster's email, and we'll remove them immediately.