:D Thanks a zillion, dear Ron.![]()
Hmm, all of questions here are from lines in Friends.
Next time I'll put more context for you when I get new problems.

Other
The person's state of mind is possibly the same, but one is a verb ("panicked") and the other is an adjective ("panicky'). "I was panicked" indicates what the person did. "I was panicky" indicates the person's state of mind. Do you have a context for that?Originally Posted by eric2004
:)
:D Thanks a zillion, dear Ron.![]()
Hmm, all of questions here are from lines in Friends.
Next time I'll put more context for you when I get new problems.
New question.
"you'd be starin' at the business end of a hissy fit. "
I was completely stuck in understanding this sentence. Please give me a hand, dear teachers.
"It's like the pot calling the kettle black"
same as " It takes one to know one"?????
It's a bit similar, but we use the 'pot caling the kettle black' when someone accuses a person of something, though they are guilty of worse. You'd say it when a notoriously dishonest politican, say, accused a colleague of lying.![]()
The phrase "business end" is used in a few phrases. It always indicates the part if something that gives a person trouble. For example, the "business end" of a baseball bat can hurt you.Originally Posted by eric2004
:)
Context is always important. The reason I asked you that question is that I can always explain the meaning of a sentence better if I understand its context.Originally Posted by eric2004
:)
"You two are totally into each other"
One girl said it to another gilr when this another girl had met a fansinating guy a while before.
What does it exactly mean?
They are fascinated and involved with one another.
Thanks, new one.
"If you need something to hold you over, I'll get you a job right here."
What means "hold you over'?