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A Bow at A Venture “And a certain man drew a bow at a venture, and smote the king of Israel between the joints of the armour.”—s Kings xxii. 34. The origin of this phrase is in the story of the death of King Ahab. The general interpretation of the phrase is that the man drew his bow without the intention of aiming at anything in particular. In other words, he...
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August 20, 2020 evirtualguru_ajaygourEnglish (Sr. Secondary)No Comment
Beat About The Bush He bet about the bush whyles others caught the birds.” –GASCOIGNE: Works (1572) The idiomatic sense of this phrase is to show hesitation in approaching a subject which one intends to discuss. Sportsmen employ many different methods of drawing or approaching a quarry. Some of these methods are clumsy, others are adroit and subtle. Even animals themselves of the predatory sort often display a cleverness not excelled...
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August 20, 2020 evirtualguru_ajaygourEnglish (Sr. Secondary)No Comment
Apple-Pie Order “Put the craft a little into apple-pie order.” —MARRYAT: Jacob Faithful (1835). To be “in apple-pie order,” or “as orderly as an apple-pie,” means anything which is arranged precisely and neatly in perfect order, and thus pleasing to the sight ; but why should an apple-pie be more orderly than any other pie ? Languages are often modified, sometimes imperceptibly, by the impingement of foreign words and phrases on...
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August 20, 2020 evirtualguru_ajaygourEnglish (Sr. Secondary)No Comment
An Axe To Grind “When I see a merchant over-polite to his customers, think I, that man has an axe to grind.”—CILAS MINER. : Who’ll Turn Grindstones? (1815). This phrase connotes selfish and personally interested motives in ostensibly public service—a suggestion of pulling strings behind the scenes for private ends. “Jobbery” and “log-rolling” are terms which are closely associated with political axe-grinding. Our phrase is founded on a story told by...
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August 20, 2020 evirtualguru_ajaygourEnglish (Sr. Secondary)No Comment
Lick Into Shape “Arts and sciences are not cast in a mould, but are formed and perfected by degrees, by often handling and polishing, as bears leisurely lick their cubs into form.”—MONTAIGNE. Words are frequently met in all languages the meanings of which have been totally changed in the course of time. The original and usual meaning of “lick” is to pass over with the tongue. as many animals caress their...
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August 20, 2020 evirtualguru_ajaygourEnglish (Sr. Secondary)No Comment
Chickens Come Home To Roost “Curses are like young chickens : they always come home to roost.” —Arabian proverb. This is another way of saying, with Shakespeare, “The evil that men do lives after them ; the good is oft interred with their bones” (Julius Cesar, III. ii). Both are wise sayings ; yet both are only half-truths, and, as such, are dangerous. The sense of our phrase is that, as...
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August 9, 2020 evirtualguru_ajaygourEnglish (Sr. Secondary), LanguagesNo Comment
What The Dickens ! The Very Dickens ! “I cannot tell what the dickens his name is.” —SHAKESPEARE : The Merry Wives of Windsor, III. These exclamatory phrases signify either indignation, irritation, impatience, or astonishment. In these senses the word “dickens” is generally used with the interrogative pronouns: “what,” “who,” “how,” “when,” “why,” and “where.” Since the time of the great Victorian novelist, Charles Dickens, it has been natural to associate...
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August 9, 2020 evirtualguru_ajaygourEnglish (Sr. Secondary), LanguagesNo Comment
Put The Cart Before The Horse “The framers of the League [of Nations] Covenant put the cart before the horse by assuming the existence, and permanence, of a community-sense among peace-loving nations, and legislating upon that assumption before it had been proved valid.” —WICKHAM STEED : The Times, 25/7/1936. Many old proverbs naturally have their origin in pastoral and agricultural pursuits. Our present phrase is unquestionably of that order, and means...
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August 9, 2020 evirtualguru_ajaygourEnglish (Sr. Secondary), LanguagesNo Comment
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