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none of your bee's waxAlternative form of none of your beeswax.Rate it:

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not worth a hill of beanssomething is of no value; worthless; also said like this:didn't amount to a hill of beansRate it:

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now you're cookingA phrase, often given in response, meaning that the subject has switched to a more suitable or more efficient approach; short for: Now you're cooking with gas; this phrase can be used with anything, not just cooking.Rate it:

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now you're talkingA phrase indicating agreement with a previously stated suggestion to change a course of action.Rate it:

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oh, ye of little faithPointing out one's lack of faith; people sometimes leave the "O" or "Oh" out of the saying when they say itRate it:

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ojo de bueyClaraboya redonda propia de las embarcaciones, diseñada para resistir mejor los efectos de la presión del agua.Rate it:

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olly olly oxen freeA call in a children's game to say that players in hiding are free to come out.Rate it:

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on all foursOn one's hands and knees.Rate it:

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on one's gamePerforming brilliantly; with optimum skillRate it:

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open mouth, insert footsaid when someone just said something they shouldn't have saidRate it:

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out of one's gourd.loony, batty displaying crazy, eccentric, erratic, or extreme ideas and expressionRate it:

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over/underAlso expressed as over-under; In sports betting, a sportsbook predicts the combined teams' score for a certain game. In an over/under bet, people bet on whether the combined teams' score will be more than (over) or less than (under) the sportsbook's predicted total combined score of the gameRate it:

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pajarita de las nievesAve insectívora de color grisáceo con vientre blanco y alas, cola, cuello, y pecho negros. Es propia de Europa, Asia y norte de África. Mide entre 16 y 19 cm de largo, de los cuales la mitad pertenecen a la cola que agita con mucha frecuencia de arriba abajo. Vive en zonas de campo abierto, cerca del agua y se ha adaptado también a morar en áreas urbanas.Rate it:

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palo coloradoÁrbol siempreverde de la familia de las mirtáceas. Crece en los bosques templados de Chile y la Argentina, en especial junto a cursos de agua. Alcanza los 20m de altura, aunque lo más frecuente son 3 a 5m;corteza es de color castaño cuando el árbol es joven y anaranjado cuando es adulto; está cubierta por una capa de textura pilosa y sedosa que se desprende al contacto; hojas son simples, de forma redonda u ovalada; brillantes por el haz; flores hermafroditas en grupos de 3 a 5 unidades, blancas o levemente rosadas y aromáticas.Rate it:

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pargo dientónPez que alcanza los 90 cm de logitud y los 20 kg de peso, de hocico largo en punta. Es más abundante en los arrecifes coralinos, pero frecuenta también los estuarios con agua salada. Habita en el Atlántico.Rate it:

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pargo grisPez que alcanza los 90 cm de logitud y los 20 kg de peso, de hocico largo en punta. Es más abundante en los arrecifes coralinos, pero frecuenta también los estuarios con agua salada. Habita en el Atlántico.Rate it:

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pargo prietoPez que alcanza los 90 cm de logitud y los 20 kg de peso, de hocico largo en punta. Es más abundante en los arrecifes coralinos, pero frecuenta también los estuarios con agua salada. Habita en el Atlántico.Rate it:

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pato cortacorrientesMerganetta armata. Mide unos 42 cm Su característica forma de conseguir su alimento, nadando contra la corriente para poder sumergirse y consumir su alimento sin ser desplazado por el agua, le ha valido su nombre. Vive en agua torrentosas donde otros patos no pueden alimentarse.Rate it:

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peladilla listadaPez de agua dulce que alcanza los 30cm, de coloración café oscuro, costados grises con franjas transversales oscuras, vientre blancuzco y puntitos oscuros en todo su cuerpo. Habita en el sur de Argentina y Chile.Rate it:

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pick yourself up, dust yourself off, and start all over againdon't quit. keep tryingRate it:

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pickin' and grinnin'a country way of saying "playing music"Rate it:

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piedra pómezPiedra ígnea volcánica, con densidad menor a la del agua, muy porosa, de color blanco gris y textura fibrosa, se emplea para desgastar o pulir.Rate it:

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pigeon-toedTo stand, walk, or carry the feet in such a way that the toes of each foot face toward each other and the knees also turn inward toward each other--like a pigeon's toes.Rate it:

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pintura al templePintura preparada con agua, como disolvente, y grasa animal u otras materias orgánicas, como aglutinante.Rate it:

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pipa de aguaEspecie de pipa que se emplea para fumar, por lo general, tabaco especial de distintos sabores, cannabis o hachís en el que el humo pasa a través de agua antes de ser aspirado y que usa un quemador de carbón.Rate it:

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please eat mom's delicious apple strudelsA common mnemonic that is used to help people remember the order of operations when calculating mathematical equations (² x / + -), in the PEMDAS order: Parentheses, Exponents, Multiplication, Division, Addition, SubtractionRate it:

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plumber's crackAny male that has his pants sliding down his butt and the top of his "cheeks" are showing.Rate it:

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pot, meet kettleUsed to draw attention to hypocrisy; a reference to the saying, "pot calling the kettle black" (see under another entry: "pot calling the kettle black"; it's the same as saying, "that's true of YOU" (and mayor may not be true of me, or not as much)Rate it:

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puddin' tame. ask me again and i'll tell you the same.An impertinent response to being asked "what is your name?"; a response indicating that the speaker does not want to reveal their real name.Rate it:

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put her there (pronounced put 'er there)something said to someone when extending one's hand, inviting you to shake hands with them in agreement or sympathyRate it:

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put outWhen someone is feels "put out". It means they did something they didn't want to do and now they feel "put out" about it...like being taken advantage of after they did it (begrudgingly).Rate it:

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quetru voladorTachyeres patachonicus. Es un pato semejante al quetru no volador, pero de menor tamaño, y aunque se impulsa en el agua de modo similar con patas y alas, esta especie puede volar. Habita no solo en la costa marina sino también en lagos interiores, desde Ñuble hacia el sur, en Chile y Argentina.Rate it:

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rain or shineIt doesn’t matter what the circumstances are or whatever happens; whatsoever the conditions or the weather is; it's most commonly used to say that an event still happen (will not be canceled) even if it rains; See also, come rain or come shineRate it:

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raise cainTo cause trouble; to behave in a disruptive manner; to make a problem; the phrase is actually "raise Cain" since Cain is a person's nameRate it:

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read 'em and weepWhen playing cards (usually poker) and the final hand is played, a person often shows their cards in anticipation of winning and boasts this phrase to brag that their hand is good enough to win that roundRate it:

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rise above your raisin's (raisings)become better than how you were raised; "Rise above your raisin's" is how you pronounce the phrase because in southern expressions, the "g" sound in words ending in "ing" is usually not spoken); rise above your raisingsRate it:

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round robinan arrangement of choosing all elements in agroup equaly in some rational order e.g. 'taking turns"Rate it:

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scaredy cata children's word for a person who is easily frightenedRate it:

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shut the front door!An exclamation of shock and/or disbelief; like saying, "No! Really?!" or "No way!" or "I don't believe it"Rate it:

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sidepiecesexDescribes extra-marital or extra-relational physically intimate interaction with one other than one's spouse or longterm partner, with whom one also has some form of established relationship; term, song, and hastag by American Activist Greshun De Bouse to describe one of the acts in which her abusive ex-fiance may have been engaged, while absent from the home daily for 15 hours.Rate it:

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six of one, half dozen of anotherIt makes no difference, they're still the same This expression is sometimes said a little differently, but is all the same no matter how it is said. Sometimes people say "half dozen" and sometimes "half a dozen " Also, sometimes the expression is "six of one, half dozen of THE other" and sometimes it is said, "six of one, half a dozen of ANother."Rate it:

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someone's jaw droppedsomebody was very surprised; often followed by "to the floor"Rate it:

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something's fishy in denmarkA shortened version of the expression, "There's something rotten in the state of Denmark"; the speaker is suspicious that there is or appears to be something wrong, amiss, illegal or dishonestRate it:

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somormujo de TasmaniaAve zambullidora de unos 28cm de longitud que habita en lagos y lagunas de agua dulce. Se le encuentra en el oriente de Australia y Tasmania.Rate it:

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spitting cotton or spittin' cottonVery thirsty. Used in the Southern USA.Rate it:

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stay wokeFirst used by Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Inductee, Huddie “Lead Belly” Ledbetter in a 1938 interview afterword of his song Scottsboro Boys-named for nine Black teenagers and young men falsely accused of raping two white women in Alabama in 1931. Lead Belly knew the Scottsboro boys, and urged Black listeners and Black persons traveling through that area in Alabama to "Stay Woke" (be vigilant, cautious, and alert) in the spoken afterword to the song. Lead Belly's direct relative, Global Activist and Equality Advocate Greshun De Bouse began the #STAYWOKELEADBELLY movement to acknowledge the phrase's origin, and redefine its present-day meaning as a more generalized, all-inclusive phrase admonishing all to be cognizant of past, present, and future world occurrences.Rate it:

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step on someone's toesTo offend someone or make them feel bad, by doing or saying something that is another person's authorityRate it:

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stick it where the sun don't shinea sarcastic way of expressing disgust to someone; akin to telling someone where to goRate it:

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stranger on the phoneDr. Greshun De Bouse's brilliant true account of a present-day angel in female human form who uplifts and changes lives of countless downtrodden men whom have never seen her, via telephone through the power of Biblical scripture and the Holy Spirit.Rate it:

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take a page out of someone's playbookTo adopt an idea or practice of another personRate it:

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