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A Loaf of Bread Well Soaked?

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Dog Hambone

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If this was asked before, it was a long time ago & I missed it.

Curly is stuffing a turkey in AN ACHE IN EVERY STAKE when the recipe calls for "a loaf of bread well soaked". He picks up a loaf of bread & then starts punching it. Shemp repeats the routine in LISTEN, JUDGE.

What's up with that? Is "soaked" some kind of boxing slang (for getting beaten up, maybe)?

 ??? 


Offline FineBari3

If this was asked before, it was a long time ago & I missed it.

Curly is stuffing a turkey in AN ACHE IN EVERY STAKE when the recipe calls for "a loaf of bread well soaked". He picks up a loaf of bread & then starts punching it. Shemp repeats the routine in LISTEN, JUDGE.

What's up with that? Is "soaked" some kind of boxing slang (for getting beaten up, maybe)?
 

I've wondered that myself.
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Offline Lefty

I think that they read "soaked" and thought it said "socked."  Just my 6&7/8 cents' worth.


Offline shemps#1

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The word "soak" can mean to beat hard or punish severely as slang.
"Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day; teach a man to fish and he will eat for a lifetime; give a man religion and he will die praying for a fish." - Unknown


Offline Dr. Hugo Gansamacher

The word "soak" can mean to beat hard or punish severely as slang.
I seem to recall that during my childhood (roughly 40 years ago) there was a game called "soak 'em" (I only recall the sound; I'm sure I never saw it written) that involved throwing a ball at people.


Dog Hambone

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The word "soak" can mean to beat hard or punish severely as slang.

Well, plant me now & dig me later. By golly, you're right. I tried Wiktionary before I started this thread, but the only definitions I found were about what you'd expect (saturating something with liquid). I then tried Dictionary.com. & they had your definition word for word:
"Verb. Slang. to beat hard; punish severely"
 
For you boozers, there is also a slang definition of soak, a noun, which is "a heavy drinker".
 


Offline BeAStooge

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For you boozers, there is also a slang definition of soak, a noun, which is "a heavy drinker".

Ref., see GOOD OLD SOAK (1937), starring Wallace Beery and Ted Healy.


Offline shemps#1

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Well, plant me now & dig me later. By golly, you're right. I tried Wiktionary before I started this thread, but the only definitions I found were about what you'd expect (saturating something with liquid). I then tried Dictionary.com. & they had your definition word for word:
"Verb. Slang. to beat hard; punish severely"
 
For you boozers, there is also a slang definition of soak, a noun, which is "a heavy drinker".
 


Yeah, that's where I got it from. I had heard the term "soak(ed)" used that way before and figured that's what it meant but I just wanted to make sure.
"Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day; teach a man to fish and he will eat for a lifetime; give a man religion and he will die praying for a fish." - Unknown


xraffle

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Finally, someone has asked a question that I've been wondering myself for many years. I finally know the answer! Thanks guys!


Offline Rich Finegan


For you boozers, there is also a slang definition of soak, a noun, which is "a heavy drinker".
 

In the 1932 Laurel & Hardy short SCRAM! Arthur Housman is drunk, and has been out in the rain. His wife asks Stan & Ollie if her husband is wet, and Stan answers, "Wet! He's soaked!"