|
#1
| |||
| |||
| I am a translator want-to-be from non English spoken country. Could you please answer my confusion? What are the meanings for each of these items? 1. Eager fingers squeeze juice out of grapevine. 2. Pay the two dollars 3. Full of yourself 4. Preaching to the choir 5. Set something on its ear 6. Playing patty-cake 7. Two-stop light 8. Mean-edge. Thanks. |
|
#2
| |||
| |||
| 3. Full of yourself - big-headed 4. Preaching to the choir - saying things to people who already belive them. 6. Playing patty-cake - a children's game involving patting hands against each other 8. Mean-edge. a creulstreak I'm afraid I'm not familiar with the others, but they are probably AE and I'm British. |
|
#3
| ||||
| ||||
| Quote:
=> a person who lacks patience; to want to do something before its time. One must wait for the grapes to grow before one can squeeze the grape juice from the grape. 2. Pay the two dollars => Pay the unnecessary amount/fee; do the unnecessary task. 4. Preaching to the choir => It's the preacher's job to convert non-believes (people who don't believe in God) into believers (people who believe in God). If a person is part of the church's choir (a group of people who praise God by singing), then that person is already a believer in God, and so the preacher need to try to convert them into believers; When I say "She is preaching to the choir" I mean that I believe her, that I agree with her, that I support her idea(s); In other words, she (the preacher) doesn't need so spend so much time and energy to convince me (a choir member) of something I already believe in, agree with, and support. 5. Set something on its ear => To turn something sideways figuratively so as to confuse it. 7. Two-stop light => As in "two stop light" town; A town that has two traffic lights only means, a very small town. :D |
|
#4
| |||
| |||
| In BE we often say 'preaching to the converted'. |
|
#5
| ||||
| ||||
| Quote:
|
|
#6
| |||||
| |||||
| Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Tags |
| confusing, phrases |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| phrases with words having same origins | Joe | Ask a Teacher | 3 | 14-Sep-2004 10:26 |
| Britain's most utterly polite and conservative phrases | supergrobi | English Idioms and Sayings | 5 | 07-Sep-2004 13:14 |
| Britain's most utterly polite and conservative phrases | supergrobi | Ask a Teacher | 1 | 04-Sep-2004 21:05 |
| transitional words and transitional phrases | Anonymous | Ask a Teacher | 2 | 04-Oct-2003 07:44 |
| Question about -ed phrases | Astro-D | Ask a Teacher | 3 | 26-Mar-2003 19:13 |