Pop Culture References and Greekisms: Difference between revisions

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Long before planes, trains, and automobiles, there were people. And people still used common phrases and saying, but they were slightly different. Here are a few examples of lines or other things in the episodes that reference familiar phrases or items in the 20th century.
Long before planes, trains, and automobiles, there were people. And people still used common phrases and sayings, but they were slightly different. Here are a few examples of lines or other things in the episodes that reference familiar phrases or items in the 20th century.


== ''[[1.01 Treasure of Zeus]]'' ==
== ''[[1.01 Treasure of Zeus]]'' ==

Revision as of 07:49, 18 September 2010

Long before planes, trains, and automobiles, there were people. And people still used common phrases and sayings, but they were slightly different. Here are a few examples of lines or other things in the episodes that reference familiar phrases or items in the 20th century.

1.01 Treasure of Zeus

  • Reference to the phrase: "No shirt, no shoes, no service."
Kora: I'm gonna have to put up a sign: 'No shirt, no feet, no service.'

1.02 Between Friends

  • dinar-counter, a.k.a. bean counter, n. Slang. A person, such as an accountant or financial officer, who is concerned with quantification, especially to the exclusion of other matters. - Answers.com
Jason: What'd Fiducius want?
Iolaus: What's a dinar-counter like him always want? The academy fees.

1.03 What a Crockery

  • It is a dream of most teenagers to borrow the keys to their father's car.
Hercules: What do you talk to dads about?
Jason: Ask him how his day was. See if you can borrow the reins to the chariot.


1.12 Battle Lines II

  • chisel, n., a metal tool with a sharpened edge at one end used to chip, carve, or cut into a solid material (as wood, stone, or metal) - Merriam-Webster
  • chiseled, adj., formed or crafted as if with a chisel - Merriam-Webster
  • Reference to the phrase: "This has [insert word] written all over it."
Iolaus: Look, I know a con when I see one, and this has 'setup' chiseled all over it.