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Mine was "You can't have your cake and eat it too." I used to think, "What's the sense of having cake if you can't eat it?"
It wasn't until I was 47 that I finally realized that it meant that if you ate your cake that you would no longer have it.
I actually use to get confused about the idea of why if you have a cake and you can't eat it which thought was odd but I do know now what it means.Mine was "You can't have your cake and eat it too." I used to think, "What's the sense of having cake if you can't eat it?"
It wasn't until I was 47 that I finally realized that it meant that if you ate your cake that you would no longer have it.
No clue either. Maybe its to do with crows not being eaten, so its like a poverty food. If you dont have anything else you might have to eat crows. Just a guess...? I only get the common ones. The one i like most, which i understand easily is "calling a spade a spade." Luckily with figurative language its not oft that people will say any of them that I wouldnt know from past context. People dont seem to use much figurative language where i live.I still don't understand "Having to eat crow" since I first heard it. I thought my mom literally ate a crow and she couldn't stop laughing. [emoji20]
No clue either. Maybe its to do with crows not being eaten, so its like a poverty food. If you dont have anything else you might have to eat crows. Just a guess...? I only get the common ones. The one i like most, which i understand easily is "calling a spade a spade." Luckily with figurative language its not oft that people will say any of them that I wouldnt know from past context. People dont seem to use much figurative language where i live.
Thank you!! never got that one until I read your explanation!Mine was "You can't have your cake and eat it too." I used to think, "What's the sense of having cake if you can't eat it?"
It wasn't until I was 47 that I finally realized that it meant that if you ate your cake that you would no longer have it.
Pulling out all the stops is a reference to playing a pipe organ with all of the features turned on."pull out all the stops"
My art teacher said we were going to do that in the county fair one year and for ages I had this image in my mind of going around in my grandfather's pickup truck and rooting up stop-signs
I am assuming that the phrase evokes the biblical parable wherein Jesus says "let he who is without sin cast the first stone" to a crowd that was going to stone a prostitute. Couple that with the glass house revealing all one's flaws, even those things done behind closed doors, and there's an explanation. Possibly...I still can't figure out what "don't throw stones in glass houses" is supposed to mean... I know that throwing a stone in a glass house would probably break the house, but... how is that relevant to anything?
Oh that makes sense! ThanksI am assuming that the phrase evokes the biblical parable wherein Jesus says "let he who is without sin cast the first stone" to a crowd that was going to stone a prostitute. Couple that with the glass house revealing all one's flaws, even those things done behind closed doors, and there's an explanation. Possibly...