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  1. 2. Nov. 2013 · I’ll be John Brown. November 2, 2013. Listen on: Apple. Spotify. Podcast Feed. ». The exclamations “I’ll be John Brown!” and “I’ll be John Browned!” have a sticky history, going back to view that the abolitionist John Brown was doing something damnable by arming a slave revolt. This is part of a complete episode.

  2. Provided to YouTube by Unidisc Music Inc.Well I'll Be John Brown · Huey 'Piano' SmithThis is... Huey 'Piano' Smith℗ 1998 Unidisc Music Inc.Released on: 1998-...

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    • Huey 'Piano' Smith - Topic
  3. 24. Mai 2017 · The use of the phrase “I’ll be John Browned was used to mean that someone’s involvement in something would lead to their hanging and/or imminent death. Years went by and people used the term to mean that they would be damned. When using the current terminology, “Well I’ll be John Brown” is interpreted that that something is a surprise.

  4. Provided to YouTube by The Orchard EnterprisesWell, I'll Be John Brown · Huey 'Piano' SmithDon't You Just Know It℗ 2016 Jasmine RecordsReleased on: 2016-02-1...

  5. 19. Nov. 2018 · Used when something is a surprise. Ex: "She got the job!" "Well, I'll be John Brown." Two cents An unwanted opinion. Ex: "We could've lived without her two cents." Turd floater A very heavy rain. Ex: "It's gonna be coming a turd floater ...

  6. 8. Feb. 2019 · Colloquial phrases like ‘Well I’ll be John Brown‘ and ‘ace in the hole’ may still be used today, but a lot of the phrases used in Westerns (specifically Tombstone) are foreign to our modern dialect. As an English major in college, literature was important to me but the history of language and the words that we use are a topic that I ...

  7. 27. Okt. 2009 · John Brown was a militant abolitionist whose violent raid on the U.S. military armory at Harpers Ferry, Virginia, was a flashpoint in the pre-Civil War era.