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		Ask for help > British Superstitions     
			
		 British Superstitions 
		
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 rmkovac
 
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							| I rememered one more: it �s bad luck if a black cat crosses your path... |  27 Feb 2010     
					
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 Pachy
 
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							| IN Spain, it �s also considered bad luck to walk under a ladder. What about in Britain? |  27 Feb 2010     
					
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 mushk@
 
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							| The same is about Britain. But what about black cats? Some sources say it is a good luck to meet a black cat, others say that a black cat crossing your way brings misfortunes.  What shoul I think? May be any native speaker can explain the difference if there is one? |  27 Feb 2010     
					
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 SueThom
 
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							| I �ve always heard it was bad luck to have a black cat cross your path, so if you saw one up ahead of you, you changed the direction you were walking in. 
 Touching wood = good luck?  Hadn �t heard that one, but if you talk about something bad not happening, you knock on wood so that it won �t.  (e.g. "I �m sure the weather will be nice for our annual picnic this weekend, because it �s never rained on that day.  Oops!" [knock, knock]
 
 
 
 |  28 Feb 2010     
					
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 eng789
 
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							| Opening an umbrella in-doors. A black cat crossing your path.   - are considered bad luck.   For good luck - always enter a room with your right foot first.                         -  pull on your ear when you hear bad news. (so it won�t happen to you) |  28 Feb 2010     
					
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 roneydirt
 
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							| 4 is bad luck in China.  It sounds like the word death.   Now there were some good ones.  There is some interesting history behind many of those good and bad luck items.  I would suggest reading the history or precieved history behind them.  Of course that is the amatuer historian in me.  Let �s not forget about stepping on a crack, or when walking with friends splitting poles when walking with friends. (splitting poles means they allow the pole to go between the group as they are walking.  Finding a penny (coin) bottom up is also old bad luck, suppose to throw it over your left shoulder to hit the devil in the eye, just like spilt salt. |  28 Feb 2010     
					
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 SueThom
 
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							| "Step on a crack, you break your mother �s back. Step on a line, you break your mother �s spine."
 
 That �s what I learned as a child, so we were always trying to avoid the cracks or lines in the sidewalk as we walked along.
 
 And if you and someone else walked on opposite sides of a pole, you each had to say "bread and butter" or it meant you �d soon get into a fight/argument.
 
 Oh, and seeing a penny on the ground:
 "See a penny, pick it up,
 All the day you �ll have good luck.
 See a penny, leave it lay,
 Bad luck will follow all the day."
 
 |  1 Mar 2010     
					
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