Bob’s Your Uncle?! The Weird, Bloody, and Slightly Unhinged Origins of Everyday Sayings You’ve Been Using Wrong

Bob’s Your Uncle?! The Weird, Bloody, and Slightly Unhinged Origins of Everyday Sayings You’ve Been Using Wrong

11:50 Mar 20, 2026
About this episode
Have you ever wondered where old sayings like “Bob’s your uncle,” “bite the bullet,” “riding shotgun,” or “mad as a hatter” actually come from? In this Strange History Podcast episode, we uncover the true historical origins behind some of the most common English expressions still used today. From Victorian political scandals involving Robert Cecil and Arthur Balfour, to brutal battlefield surgeries before anesthesia, mercury poisoning in 19th-century hat factories, medieval Scottish murder trials, naval warfare under Horatio Nelson, and the violent world of 1890s boxing — these everyday phrases have darker and stranger roots than you might expect.Discover how “break the ice” began in frozen Renaissance trade routes, why “saved by the bell” has nothing to do with coffins, how “caught red-handed” originated in 15th-century Scottish law, and what life was really like for sailors who were sent “under the weather.” This episode dives deep into the etymology, first recorded uses, and real historical events that shaped the idioms we casually say without thinking.If you love strange history, word origins, forgotten Victorian scandals, maritime folklore, industrial-era tragedies, and the hidden stories behind everyday language, this episode will change the way you speak forever.Subscribe for more deep dives into strange history, forgotten events, and the bizarre true stories hiding in plain sight.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-strange-history-podcast--5773362/support.🎧 The Strange History Podcast Love bizarre true stories, forgotten scandals, and history’s most unhinged moments?Submit your ideas for The Strange History PodcastFollow The Strange History Podcast wherever you listen and never miss an episode. 🔗 Listen & Subscribe:Apple PodcastsSpotifyiHeartRadioAudibleNew episodes regularly. History gets weird here.
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