gazelle in the garden

Etymology
Possibly from an word that means both  and.

Noun

 * 1)  Used during a meal to alert a family member or friend that they have a crumb on their face.
 * 2) * 1956, Louise Hall Tharp, page 254
 * At one of their literary dinners, should a crumb get caught in the luxuriant Fields beard — "There's a gazelle in the garden, Jamie," his wife would say.
 * 1) * 1956, Louise Hall Tharp, page 254
 * At one of their literary dinners, should a crumb get caught in the luxuriant Fields beard — "There's a gazelle in the garden, Jamie," his wife would say.
 * At one of their literary dinners, should a crumb get caught in the luxuriant Fields beard — "There's a gazelle in the garden, Jamie," his wife would say.