Jul 21, 2011 @ 11:25 am

The Amazing Spider-Man trailer just hit the web and we’re all wrapped up in it (get it?!). Aside from Andrew Garfield transforming into a hot action superhero, we get a first look at Emma Stone‘s blond hair makeover in action. When she first dyed her ‘do last December, she told InStyle.com: “Blondes do have more fun! But sometimes I look in the mirror and still feel like I’m wearing a wig.” Watch the whole Spider-Man trailer above. It hits theaters July 2012.

Tell us: Do you plan on watching the new Spider-Man flick?

SpidermanCourtesy Photo

Sharon Clott

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attractive cookie monster hats

I collect these. Inclusions in this list are welcome. Also, observe that in some instances I’m not sure the origin of the particular expression. If you have knowledge or theories of origin for anything below, I’d like to hear of your stuff. I hope you enjoy these.

Talking Through Your Hat

To speak nonsense in order to lie. c1885. a job interview in The World entitled “How About White Shirts”, a reporter asked a brand new York streetcar conductor what he thought about efforts to find the conductors to put on white shirts like their counterparts in Chicago. “Dey’re talkin’ tru deir hats” he was quoted as replying.]

Eating Your Hat

There is no such thing like a sure thing, but that is where this expression originates from. If you tell someone you’ll eat your hat when they do something, make sure you’re not wearing your very best hat-just in case. expression goes back a minimum of towards the reign of Charles II of Great Britain and had something related to the amorous proclivities of ‘ol Charlie. Apparently they named a goat after him that had his same love of life which included, within the goat’s case, eating hats.]

Old Hat

Old, dull stuff; out of fashion. seems to come from the fact that hat fashions are never stand still. The very fact of the matter is the fact that hat fashions had not been changing very fast at all before the turn from the 1800s. The expression therefore is probably about 100 years old.]

Mad Like a Hatter

Totally demented, crazy. did, indeed, go mad. They inhaled fumes from the mercury that was area of the process of making felt hats. Not recognizing the violent twitching and derangement as the signs of a brain disorder, people made fun of affected hat-makers, often treating them as drunkards. In the U.S., the problem was called the “Danbury shakes.” (Danbury, Connecticut, was a hat-making center.) Mercury is not used in the felting process: hat-making — and hat-makers — are secure.]

Hat In Hand

A demonstration of humility. For instance, “I come hat in hand” implies that I are available in deference or perhaps in weakness. assume that the origins are from feudal times when serfs or any lower people in feudal society were required to remove their hats within the presence of the lord or monarch (remember the Dr. Seuss book “The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins”?). A hat is the most prideful adornment.]

Pass The Hat

Literally to pass through a man’s hat among members of an audience or group as a means for collecting money. Also to beg or request charity. origin is self-evident as a man’s hat turned upside down constitutes a fine container.]

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