The slang term "beeswax" is used instead of "business" - so: "Mind your own business".
It means "Mind your own business."
It's simply a polite way of saying, "mind your own business". The latter sounds ungracious and even rude, while substituting beeswax for business softens the comment. --- There is an absurd story, much repeated on the internet, that 18th-century ladies used to fill in the pockmarks on their faces (this was when smallpox was a common and disfiguring disease)with beeswax, which would melt if the lady sat too near the fire. If someone else warned her about this, she would retort "mind your OWN beeswax!" This story is only mentioned to say that there isn't a shred of truth in it. Though beeswax was often (and still is) a component of cosmetics of all kinds, it was not used as a pockmark filler in this way. The beeswax saying is of 1920s origin, a garbling of "mind your own business." While it might seem harshly rude to say "mind your own business," changing the last word to "beeswax" softens the blow, and makes a jovial point of the same sentiment. ---
Beeswax is a wax secreted by bees from which they make honeycomb; or, the processed form of this wax used in the manufacture of various goods; "Business"; in phrases like mind your own beeswax and none of your beeswax. It can be used to make candles or hairgel or lip balm
it doesnts so mind ur own beeswax!live with ur own style
a man had a jar of beeswax and someone wanted to know what it was so he said none of your beeswax There is an absurd story, much repeated on the internet, that 18th-century ladies used to fill in the pockmarks on their faces (this was when smallpox was a common and disfiguring disease)with beeswax, which would melt if the lady sat too near the fire. If someone else warned her about this, she would retort "mind your OWN beeswax!" I mention this story only to say that there isn't a shred of truth in it. Though beeswax was often (and still is) a component of cosmetics of all kinds, it was not used as a pockmark filler in this way. And, as Smokey correctly says, the saying is of 1920s origin, a childish garbling of "mind your own business". VSD While it might seem harshly rude to say "mind your own business," changing the last word to "beeswax" softens the blow, and makes a jovial point of the same sentiment. http://www.phrases.org.uk/bulletin_board/42/messages/1153.html Keep from meddling, pay attention to one's own affairs, as in If she would only mind her own business, there would be a lot fewer family quarrels. Already described as a wise course by the ancients (Seneca had it as Semper meum negotium ago, "I always mind my own business"), this precept has been repeated in English since about 1600. In the 1930s, a slang version rendered the saying as "Mind your own beeswax". It is meant to soften the force of the retort. Folk etymology has it that this idiom was used in the colonial period when women would sit by the fireplace making wax candles together, though there are many other theories. http://www.answers.com/topic/mind-your-own-business
A lyric from a Peeping Tom song.
"Mind your own beeswax" is an informal way of telling someone to focus on their own business or affairs and not to interfere in others'. It is a playful and colloquial way of asserting boundaries and privacy.
The story goes, though I'm not sure how much of it is legend and how much is fact: Back when young ladies would gather to make candles for home use, they would often gossip while they created. Hence to say "mind your own beeswax" was a way to say "mind what you are doing and not the affairs of others." The other saying born out of here is "none of your beeswax" meaning, "it's none of your concern"
The rebus "minudend" represents the phrase "mind your own business." The word "minudend" can be broken down into "mind" and "your own" (with "dend" sounding like "dend" in "business"). Thus, it cleverly conveys the message to focus on one's own matters rather than interfering with others.
Mind your own beeswax or in a manner more fitting to the pious check your motives perceptibly and intentionally before interfering and don't proceed if the results are potentially worse than the initial problem. The most inhumane atrocities occur under the control or guidance of people with good intentions or high expectations ignoring their own misgivings and/or reasonable thinking bent on their misguided faith in their ability to solve their perceived dilemmas.
Say: * None of your beeswax. * Mind your own business * So what? * Do you have a problem with that? * Too bad. * Your problem. * My opinion; not yours. * Why do you care? * There's nothing wrong with that. * Watch yourself. * Don't say that. * I don't care.
You can use soy wax. Soy wax is all-natural and can serve as a substitute for beeswax. It is most commonly found in candles, but it can also replace beeswax in lip balms, lotions, body butters, and other cosmetics. It is no harder than beeswax, so it can be used in equal amounts in recipes.