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Meaning of “Cut Off The Nose To Spite The Face” phrase of Idiom, definition and synonyms use in sentence.

Cut Off The Nose To Spite The Face “He that smites his nose and has it not, forfeits his face to the king.” —Old proverb. To cut off the nose to spite the face is said of one who, Ito be revenged on his neighbour, materially injures himself. (Grose: Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, 1796). The origin of this phrase is probably based on the story of a man who, having...
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Meaning of “Cut The Gordian Knot” phrase of Idiom, definition and synonyms use in sentence.

Cut The Gordian Knot “His sword would have cut the Gordian Knot of hereditary right.” -BOLINGBROKE: On Parties (1735). “Cutting the Gordian knot” is ordinarily held to signify a promptitude in the determination to solve an intricate problem. As the result of a chariot race which he had won, he being the first to enter the Temple of Jupiter at Gordium, a certain peasant of Phrygia, named Gordiok, was chosen by...
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Meaning of “The Jingo Spirit” phrase of Idiom, definition and synonyms use in sentence.

The Jingo Spirit One would imagine that men have always given expression to oaths—some by heaven, others by earth and the things on the earth. Many kings and queens of history have been guilty of these stupid practices. Louis XII of France is said to have uttered as his favourite oath: “The devil take me I” Oaths commonly ascribed to certain of our English rulers are : “God’s wounds !” ;...
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Meaning of “The Writing on The Wall” phrase of Idiom, definition and synonyms use in sentence.

The Writing on The Wall “In the same hour came forth fingers of a man’s hand, and wrote over against the candlestick, upon the plaster of the wall of the king’s palace.” – Daniel v.s. “The writing on the wall” is a warning of impending disaster. The great feast which Belshazzar, the last King of Babylon, gave to a thousand of his lords, his wives and concubines, while he drank impiously...
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Meaning of “The Heel of Achilles” phrase of Idiom, definition and synonyms use in sentence.

The Heel of Achilles “Hanover—the Achilles’ heel to invulnerable England.” —CARLYLE. To “bruise the heel of Achilles” is to attack a person, or a nation, at its weakest point. It used to be said of Ireland that she was “the Achilles’s heel of the British Empire,” doubtless on account of her internal dissensions and her alleged disloyalty. Invulnerability was ever the one desideratum of the gods and heroes of mythology. Many...
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Meaning of “Keep the Wolf from the Door” phrase of Idiom, definition and synonyms use in sentence.

Keep the Wolf from the Door This phrase indicates mankind’s heartfelt wish that the specter of hunger and the haunting fear of the consequences of debt must be banished from the very threshold of their lives. One of the earliest poetical references is in Harding’s Chronicle (1470): Endow hym now with noble sapience, By which he may the wolf were (that is, beat or drive away) from the gate. In the...
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Meaning of “Neither Fish, Flesh, Fowl nor Good Red Herring” phrase of Idiom, definition and synonyms use in sentence.

Neither Fish, Flesh, Fowl nor Good Red Herring “She is neither fish nor flesh nor good red herring.” —JOHN HEYWOOD: Proverbs (1540). The phrase may have been amended: the words “nor good red herring” being tacked on by someone who wished facetiously to emphasize it ; just as the word “fowl” has been added in our day. Its meaning is to describe certain types of men who pride themselves on their...
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Meaning of “The Road to Hell is Paved with Good Intentions” phrase of Idiom, definition and synonyms use in sentence.

The Road to Hell is Paved with Good Intentions “Hell is paved with the skulls of priests.” -ST. CHRYSOST This Greek proverb may be the origin of our phrase, for it well illustrates its meaning, namely that there are people in every age who, though they always mean well—whose motives, indeed, are always of the best—seem congenitally incapable of doing the right thing. If all the wrongdoers in all the ages...
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