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a pinch and a punch..

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Zhukov | 10:37 Wed 01st Feb 2012 | Phrases & Sayings
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...for the First of the month!

We are both enjoying a weeks leave.Woke at 9! :-)As I made a move to go put on some coffee,I gave my oh,a pinch and a punch for the first of the month!

She was surprised,and gave out a cry of "mock pain"!

We both were convinced that each other had introduced this sometimes remembered ritual!It was"nt me!..sounds like some WestCountry yokel thing! ;-)...no,seriously,could it have come from folk lore?Or from across the Atlantic?...in a Hollywood comedy,or some such..?
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Her indoors and I did it to each other this morn: All the kids did in my home town L'A (Littlehampton) did donkeys years ago.::
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Never heard of it. Brewer's Dict of Phrase and Fable has this.

Pinch, punch, first of the month, and no returns.
An old-fashioned children's trick, usually carried out fairly gently on the first of the month. No derivation given.
Although we used to do it at school, at home the preferred greeting on the first of the month was "white rabbits", I have no idea where that came from either.
Hadn't heard of Pinch Punch until fairly recently. Have always said "white rabbits" on the first of every month but no idea where that came from.
The 'white rabbits' good luck chorus certainly sounds ancient, but the fact remains that it appears nowhere in English print before 1959! Yes, the reference was in the Opies' book about schoolchildrens' lore, but, if it was truly old, one would certainly expect there to have been some reference to it or use of it in earlier literature. The single word 'rabbits' did appear in the same context earlier but not before 1920 either.
There are some who believe it originated with Lewis Carroll's ‘Alice's Adventures in Wonderland' and others who claim it derives from a German custom of pagan times when pairs of white rabbits were apparently sacrificed at the opening of months for luck.
However, this is one of these things with an air of the historic about it which it does not truly deserve. The "tradition" of saying these particular words on the first of a month for luck is, at most perhaps, about a century old, despite the idea that sacred rabbits existed in much earlier times.
"Pinch punch first of the month and no returns." This is accompanied by the person's pinching and punching the victim. It seems to have originated in the days when people believed in witches. Just as we throw a pinch of salt over our shoulder when we have spilt some, even today, some people claim that the ‘pinch' element refers to a pinch of salt. In this instance, the pinch of salt was believed to weaken the witch's powers and the follow-up punch was to drive her away. The ‘and no returns' element was supposed to prevent the victim responding by saying:"A kick and a flick for being so quick!" These words would also be accompanied by the appropriate actions if the first person failed to add the extra words!
or the other rejoinder is "Here's a kick for being so quick and a punch in the eye for being so sly".

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