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"Shiver me timbers" (or "shiver my timbers" in Standard English) is an exclamation in the form of a mock oath usually attributed to the speech of pirates in works of fiction. It is employed as a literary device by authors to express shock, surprise, or annoyance.
Shiver My timbers (or My) Timbers may refer to: Shiver my timbers, an exclamation; Shiver My Timbers (1931), an Our Gang short; Shiver Me Timbers!
The Heart of Saturday Night is the second studio album by singer and songwriter Tom Waits, released on October 15, 1974, on Asylum Records. [2] The title song was written as a tribute to Jack Kerouac. [3]
Parodies like to play with the title and give Hans an anticapitalist meaning or sketch him as an insecure personality. Gerold Späths Hans makes a global career and forgets that he looked for the meaning of fear. [24] Rainer Kirsch sketched a film version, in which the hero is murdered by fanning courtiers and thus learns fear too late.
It's cheesy, but in this situation, we'll permit one--and only one--resounding yarrggh from each reader of this news. Spiral Knights developer Three Rings and publisher SEGA have announced that ...
The tracks "Shiver Me Timbers" and "Rainbow Sleeve" were edited out of the home video version. Divine Madness has been re-released on DVD, but, as yet, only in the US.
Shiver me Timbers I'm a sailin' away The young Noodles reads Martin Eden in the Sergio Leone film Once Upon a Time in America (1984). In La Belle Époque (2019), Martin Eden is the book that Victor Drumond had been reading 45 years earlier in his 1974 hotel room.
"shiver my timbers" is a legitimate phrase actually found in the OED, it is the correct phrase, derived from "my timbers" as in "my goodness" (not "me goodness"). Somewhere someone started a slang variation with "me timbers", but it is not "proper" English. So we have a proper English phrase, and a slang phrase.