On Wed, Mar 09, 2011 at 05:39:07AM -0600, Stan Hoeppner wrote: > Dennis Guhl put forth on 3/8/2011 6:41 PM: > > >> Dorothy, you're not in Kansas anymore. > > > > What does this saying mean? > > It's a para-quote from the 1939 American movie "The Wizard of Oz". > Dorothy, a young girl living in farm house in Kansas, is swept away by a > powerful tornado. When the house lands on solid ground, and Dorothy > opens the door, she finds herself in a "wonderland". She says to her > little dog, "Toto, I've a feeling we're not in Kansas any more."
Yes, someone else shove me in a private mail in this direction. I wasn't aware of this line knowing only the german version of the book and film. > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EPWenQxryr4 Nice clip. Thank you. > When someone uses this phrase, or a variation, in modern culture, they > are conveying to a another person that they're seeing something they > never knew existed. This is not as bad as I thought it might be. I asked because I found no explanation of this saying and got redirected to the wikipedia article of the film where I found Dorothy's quotation. Knowing about the diffenrent colored filming in Kansas an Oz I misinterpret the meaning as 'the world is not b/w' wich would be 'you are to narrow minded'. Stan, thank you for the explanation. So long Dennis