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  1. Oct 7, 2014 · Holy Cow! dates to at least 1905. The earliest known appearance of the phrase was in a tongue-in-cheek letter to the editor: "A lover of the cow writes to this column to protest against a certain variety of Hindoo oath having to do with the vain use of the name of the milk producer. These profane exclamations, 'holy cow!' and, 'By the stomach ...

  2. "Holy cow!" This is, as you'd expect, just an exclamation of surprise. I have never seen it used any where but at the beginning of a statement (to prime it for effect) or on its own (as a simple exclamation). cow is always singular, never plural. That is, never holy cows, always holy cow. Some cursory investigation tells me that the phrase is a ...

  3. There are hundreds of variations on the phrase, such as "Holy Guacamole!" and "Holy Cow!" Most of these are considered entirely non-offensive, with the exception of the best-known version, "Holy Shit!," which intensifies the taboo by combining the religious modifier with the taboo against directly referring to the fruits of the bathroom.

  4. Oct 9, 2014 · holy cats interj (Variations: cow or gee or mackerel or Moses or schmutz or shit or smoke or sox may replace cats) entry form [holy cats] by 1900, cow by 1940s, gee by 1895, mackerel by 1903, Moses by 1900, schmutz by 1990s, shit by 1940s, smoke by 1889, sox by 1909 An exclamation of surprise, wonder, dismay, admiration, etc. ... [euphemisms ...

  5. Aug 8, 2019 · Profanity that calls something/someone that/who isn’t holy, holy (e.g. “Holy cow” for non-Hindus), is arguably a violation of the latter prohibition. I added “arguably” both times because I don’t underestimate the inventiveness of exegetes and theologians to come up with all kinds of nuances, exceptions, alternative interpretations.

  6. According to the OED, using holy with another word as an oath or expletive dates back to 1785 with Holy Willie, "a hypocritically pious person". This trend continues with other words, like cow and moses. The first recorded instance in the OED of holy smoke is from 1892 in the book Naulahka by Kipling and Balestier.

  7. Jun 10, 2013 · 19. The phrase "to have a cow" is defined as "to be very worried, upset, or angry about something" in Free Dictionary Online. Other sources also define it to mean to react very strongly and emotionally. While it almost always is a negative response to stressful news or events, I imagine it might be used under other more positive circumstances.

  8. Jun 23, 2020 · 外国人常说的“Holy cow!”究竟是什么意思?难道是召唤神牛!,去年曾有一头holy cow在澳洲爆红。这头叫短裤(Knickers)的荷斯坦牛高近两米,体重超过1.3吨,因为体型过于巨大免于被屠宰,在农场安享晚年。这么高大的神牛可不是天天都能见到,但为什么经常能听到外国人经常说“Holy cow!”呢?其实 ...

  9. Nov 15, 2017 · "Sacred cow" doesn't completely cover what I'm looking for (and I think it might be a bit insensitive). What I'm looking for is a word or a short phrase that would mean something like, "an idea or creed that is beyond reproach, upon which all other ideas must agree or be either be discarded or redefined."

  10. Aug 10, 2013 · There are 8 parts of speech. People seem to have forgotten about Interjections. They express emotion, good or bad. They are the "Golly Gee" and "Holy Cow" from days gone by, which have now been replaced by vulgar slang and swears: We currently see a lot of 'F-ing hell', tons of 'what the f-', the forever loving 'sh--' exclamation.

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    Holy Cow meaning