Reader Opinions

David – (tongue in cheek) June 1, 2018

I noticed that too Sanjay, but I honestly wondered if that was a sly hint of tongue-in-cheek instead of an accident.

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Shamyaprasa – (kill two birds with one stone) June 1, 2018

This is a time honoured idiom in usage for five centuries. A parallel idiom is in Tamil language dating back to centuries: ONE STONE TWO MANGOES. The latter does not involve any killing!

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Anonymous – (fate worse than death) May 30, 2018

Actually the ape was going to forcibly take Jane away as his mate when Tarzan intervened. That was the fate referred to as a thousand times worse than death.

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Anonymous – (hang in there) May 23, 2018

May be the military?

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Priya – (when pigs fly) May 23, 2018

Is it really possible or not?

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Vivek Narain – (go to the dogs) May 2, 2018

Or it may return from the dogs if things improve.

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Eminem Fan – (when it rains, it pours) April 28, 2018

This saying was also used in Eminem’s song “Going Through Changes”

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Adesh S – (call it a day) April 28, 2018

If someone is wrong we call it day.

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Zedboy – (break a leg) April 27, 2018

lmao @payton.
I think you scared her, especially if you’d shout.

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Richard Dick – (on the crest of a wave) April 26, 2018

When I saw this I thought it was an example and meaning of an actual crest that goes along with a wave. I’m very upset I wasted approximately 5 minutes of my life for neither of these. Please consider adding the original or real meaning of some of these sayings. Thank you.

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