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Origin of phrase Que te cuentas Sebastian?Talk about anything here, just keep it clean. |
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#1
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Origin of phrase Que te cuentas Sebastian?
I am English. My father was from Hellin, Albacete, Castilla La Mancha.
I remember my father occasionally used to say to me "Que te cuentas Sebastian? Cuatro chuletas sin pan." This sounds as if it was a line from a poem, a song, or possibly a traditional saying. Entirely by chance, the mother of my son has named him Sebastian. Does anyone know the origin of these lines? Or how I could find out? Google provides no obvious clue when I enter the words themselves. |
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#3
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I like your reply.
Of the rhymes that you mention in English, I know that "What's your story, morning glory" would have become more widely used because of the Oasis song, even if it didn't originate with it. The other thing I notice is that there is almost an internal rhyme along with the final rhyme in the Spanish phrase I mentioned, in that the penultimate vowels as well as the final vowels are the same in "Sebastian" and "sin pan". |
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