I gotta lot of senseless crap this Xmas... among the worst was a budda holding a blue plasma ball over his head.! Anyone else get anything unusual or just plain weird..??
Seasons Greetings!!
Seasons Greetings!!
Sorry, my bad. Next year I'll give you a subscription to VRRB insteadLonelyGhost said:a one-year subscription to PERB ...
Euro_SZabina said:Ajándék lónak ne nézd a fogát!
There, I can't translate it looks wierd in english, so I just have only this one to say.![]()
please enlighten me,PeterLongwood said:"Don't look a gift horse in the mouth."
It's not only an English idiom, but based upon Szabina's post (I promised to never call her "Bina"), it's an Hungarian idiom as well.xoxo Amie said:please enlighten me,
what does that mean?
english idioms are my kryptonite![]()
I prefer: A tiltott gyümölcs a legédesebb.Euro_SZabina said:Ajándék lónak ne nézd a fogát!
FuZzYknUckLeS said:I prefer: A tiltott gyümölcs a legédesebb.
Do you have an English degree? You seem to be a bit of a wordsmith.xoxo Amie said:please enlighten me,
what does that mean?
english idioms are my kryptonite![]()
xoxo Amie said:please enlighten me,
what does that mean?
english idioms are my kryptonite![]()
PLW, thanks for taking the time to clarify that for me!PeterLongwood said:It's not only an English idiom, but based upon Szabina's post (I promised to never call her "Bina"), it's an Hungarian idiom as well.
It comes from the practice of checking a horse's teeth to determine its age. This is something one would do if buying a horse. But, if someone gives you a horse you should accept it gracefully without checking its teeth.
Basically it means: be grateful for the gift, whatever it is.
Hope this helps.
PLW
thanks TJ, um... for the thoughtfulness lolteejay69 said:Hmm . . . note to self. Must get Aime an English Idiom Pocket Dictionary next year. Wonder if there as an idiom for taking calls in the middle of self-improvement. (lol)
Nope...Hoops said:Do you have an English degree? You seem to be a bit of a wordsmith.
I have an English degree and I find idioms and etymology fascinating. Yup, I'm a words geek.
Check out these:
http://www.idiomsite.com/#d
http://www.etymonline.com/






