alpacinou
Key Member
- Joined
- Sep 30, 2019
- Member Type
- Interested in Language
- Native Language
- Persian
- Home Country
- Iran
- Current Location
- Iran
Hello.
In my language when you are doing something pointless and futile, you use an expression that literally translates to "I'm burying a dead rat".
It means either you are doing nothing, or you are doing something useless.
Examples:
What are you doing in the quarantine man? -Well, I'm burying dead rats.
What does he do in the company? -He does nothing useful. He buries dead rats all day and gets a nice salary because he is connected to the boss.
Is there a similar expression in English? I am looking for an idiom.
I found this idiom "twiddle your thumbs" but it does not work because it does not mention doing something useless, or not doing anything useful.
It's about waiting.
In my language when you are doing something pointless and futile, you use an expression that literally translates to "I'm burying a dead rat".
It means either you are doing nothing, or you are doing something useless.
Examples:
What are you doing in the quarantine man? -Well, I'm burying dead rats.
What does he do in the company? -He does nothing useful. He buries dead rats all day and gets a nice salary because he is connected to the boss.
Is there a similar expression in English? I am looking for an idiom.
I found this idiom "twiddle your thumbs" but it does not work because it does not mention doing something useless, or not doing anything useful.
It's about waiting.