off the bone or from the bone

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JACEK1

Key Member
Joined
Feb 10, 2013
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Interested in Language
Native Language
Polish
Home Country
Poland
Current Location
Poland
Hello all users!

Suppose that you eat a chicken leg. You rotate it from time to time and sink your teeth into its delicious flesh. What would you call the activity:
eating off the bone 😞 or eating from the bone?

Thank you.
 
I'd be surprised to learn there is an expression for that. But if there is one I would like to know what it is.
 
I don't know of a phrase for it. Mind you, I've been vegetarian/vegan for nearly 25 years, so I'm not sure I'd know it even if it existed.
 
Fair enough. Do you nibble the corn from or off the cob?
 
I would eat corn straight off the cob.
 
We would describe meat (and corn) as being on the bone (or on the cob) so I suppose that we eat it off the bone (or off the cob), as the case may be.
 
I would like to explain something. I am not looking for any expression. I was misled by the fact that "meat off the bone" means "meat without bone" and I didn't know whether or not to use "eating off the bone or eating from the bone".
 
Except that we don't. The four people who have responded so far (five including me) don't actually know. A couple have guessed what we would say if we said it. We clearly don't feel the need for such as an expression.

Speak for yourself. I'm offering what I would say and what I think makes the most sense. Note the OP, which asked "What would you call the activity: eating off the bone or eating from the bone?"
 
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