Donate SIGN UP

Happy as Larry...

Avatar Image
McMouse | 09:30 Thu 21st Apr 2011 | ChatterBank
10 Answers
Just heard this said and wondered if anyone knows who Larry was?
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 10 of 10rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by McMouse. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
He used to live next door to me, his Mum must have called him larry for a bit of a laugh. He was as miserable as sin
A lamb?
Grayson!
It is an Australian phrase - possibly but not certainly from Larry Foley. Boxer, 1847-1917
He was one of the singers in The Floaters (sh!t name lol) - sounded as gay as gay could be
According to Phrase finder:
There are two commonly espoused contenders. One is the Australian boxer Larry Foley (1847 - 1917). Foley was a successful pugilist who never lost a fight. He retired at 32 and collected a purse of £1,000 for his final fight. So, we can expect that he was known to be happy with his lot in the 1870s - just when the phrase is first cited.

The alternative explanation is that it relates to the Cornish and later Australian/New Zealand slang term 'larrikin', meaning a rough type or hooligan, i.e. one predisposed to larking about. 'Larrikin' would have been a term that Meredith would have known. The earliest citation of that is also from New Zealand and also around the time of the first citation, in H. W. Harper's Letters from New Zealand, 1868:

"We are beset with larrikins, who lurk about in the darkness and deliver every sort of attack on the walls and roof with stones and sticks."
Larry Grayson - shut that door and what a gay day?
Sal - Hey Ho - don't forget Slack Alice and Pop It In Pete 2 of his friends!!!
aah so that's what larrikin means ratty! There's a band called Larrikin Love, I forgot to google what larrikin means!
Now who is Annie.... ?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oSm_xmWbOeI
I had a goat once called Slack Alice. A big white one. It used to eat all my washing off the line and we had to get rid of it when it bit my son's ear. It was only trying to nuzzle him I think, but Alice was not very gentle....

I have a photograph of him being 'nuzzled' - my son thinks it so cruel of me that when he was being "eaten alive by a goat" instead of consoling him, I took photographs......

1 to 10 of 10rss feed

Do you know the answer?

Happy as Larry...

Answer Question >>