telling bone
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]A Hobson-Jobson based on interpreting telephone as telling + bone; coined by British screenwriter Richard Carpenter for the TV series Catweazle.
Noun
[edit]telling bone (plural telling bones)
- (humorous, preceded by definite article) The telephone.
- 1971, Richard Carpenter, Catweazle and the Magic Zodiac, Harmondsworth: Puffin Books, page 134:
- His eyes widened. The box contained the Divine Egg! The strange sorcerer who was muttering into the telling-bone had found lots of them.
- 1985 May 12, The Canberra Times, page 22, column 1:
- Lately, Fergus has been even more insufferable: he's in love, a piece of intelligence I winkled out of the elder curmudgeon, his grandfather, the Laird of Gunning, on the telling bone last night.
- 1998, The Spectator[1], London:
- When we land I'll give you a tinkle on the telling bone.
- 2021, John Martin, Different Stripes: The first six quirky novels of the Windy Mountain series[2], John Martin:
- She's visiting her sister in Launceston and I spoke to her on the telling bone last night.