no
the person that says how now brown cow is the cat in the hat
its not a chicken its a cow
Brow-now, as in how now, brown cow ...
how, bow ,sow, brown, down, vow, cow, now.
The Gertrude Berg Show - 1961 How Now Brown Cow 1-20 was released on: USA: 22 February 1962
Assonance is the literary device used in the phrase "How are you now brown cow", where the similar vowel sounds of the words "now" and "brown" are repeated.
The phrase "how now brown cow" is a traditional British English phrase used as a diction exercise to practice proper pronunciation. It doesn't have a specific origin but has been used for many years in speech training programs.
it is used in words such as how now brown and cow. lol haha idkkk.....
I think it has something to do with (I may be wrong) men in Minnesota. Men in Minnesota had to remove their hat if they passed a cow, as a show of courtesy.
Brow-now as in 'How now, brown cow?' Most native German speakers pronounce it: bran ow where the 'a' is the same sound as in in 'father'.
This phrase was used in a "Milko" television advertisement in the 60's. The jingle went something like this:How now brown cow, what's new with youWhat's new with me? why Milko!Milko was the original powdered milk product in North America.The term "how now" however dates back to some medieval time and means "How are you doing now?" or "How are things going now?"The phrase 'How Now Brown Cow' has been used in teaching English elocution as practice in sounding rounded vowels (the 'ow' sound) since the 1920s. It very quickly went into the language as a jocular form of greeting.