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rusticatio, vita rusticanacountry life (of casual, temporary visitors).Rate it:

(4.00 / 1 vote)
spill overTo enter into another zone by way of accident or overcrowding; to overflow.Rate it:

(4.00 / 2 votes)
The Hell You Say?Depression Daze Ejaculation Offered In Response to Another's Astonishing, Earth Shaking, Unbelievable, Astounding 'Remark':Rate it:

(4.00 / 2 votes)
e pluribus unumA national motto of the United States of America, meaning "From many, one", or "out of many, one", referring to the integration of 13 independent colonies into one country, and that has taken an additional meaning, giving the pluralistic nature of American society from immigration.Rate it:

(3.75 / 4 votes)
run around afterTo spend a lot of time doing things for another person or group of people. Often used when that person could reasonably do the things for themselves.Rate it:

(3.75 / 4 votes)
proverbs run in pairsEvery proverb seems to be contradicted by another proverb with an opposed message, such as "too many cooks spoil the broth" and "many hands make light work."1863, Sir Richard Burton, Abeokuta and the Camaroons Mountains, vol. 1, Tinsley (London), p. 309:Moreover, all the world over, proverbs run in pairs, and pull both ways: for the most part one neutralizes, by contradiction, the other.Rate it:

(3.50 / 2 votes)
sneak offTo leave a place, or a meeting, without being seen or heard.Rate it:

(3.50 / 2 votes)
sneak upTo approach a person or animal without being seen or heard.Rate it:

(3.50 / 2 votes)
body of waterAny significant accumulation of water, usually covering the Earth or another planet, such as a river, lake or a bay.Rate it:

(3.00 / 1 vote)
by the seat of your pantsAn aviator's term, Cross country flying, navigating via ground observation of landmarks, arrows on rooftops. water towers, railroad tracks, roadways, radio/TV towers; and by the 'seat of your pants'.Rate it:

(3.00 / 1 vote)
ears are burningBeing the topic of discussion in another place; or sensing that this is happening.Rate it:

(3.00 / 2 votes)
farm outTo subcontract some task to another; to outsource.Rate it:

(3.00 / 1 vote)
hang on every wordTo be completely attentive to what another person is saying.Rate it:

(3.00 / 1 vote)
lay offTo place all or part of a bet with another bookmaker in order to reduce risk.Rate it:

(3.00 / 1 vote)
made for each otherWell suited to be in a relationship with one another, especially as romantic or marital partners.Rate it:

(3.00 / 2 votes)
man is a wolf to manHumans prey upon one another.Rate it:

(3.00 / 2 votes)
managerial inbreedingBad management, caused by managers making poor selection choices in recruitment, rewards, and promotions of the staff that report to them, leading to another generation of managers who lack the necessary skill sets to reward and promote the most effective staff.Rate it:

(3.00 / 1 vote)
paper tigerA seemingly fierce or powerful person, country or organisation without the ability to back up their words; apparently powerful but actually ineffective.Rate it:

(3.00 / 2 votes)
red rideranother name for "War", one of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse.Rate it:

(3.00 / 1 vote)
sabre-rattlingAny threat, such as one company threatening another with a lawsuit.Rate it:

(3.00 / 2 votes)
saddleA block of wood, usually fastened to one spar and shaped to receive the end of another.Rate it:

(3.00 / 1 vote)
show the flagTo display the flag of one's country, especially as an expression of patriotic pride.Rate it:

(3.00 / 2 votes)
sneak up onTo approach a person or animal without being seen or heard.Rate it:

(3.00 / 1 vote)
throw enough mud at the wall, some of it will stickTry the same thing (or similar things) often enough, and, even if the general standard is poor, sometimes one will be successful.2001, And still no one is shouting stop. read in The Kingdom archives at on 02 Nov 06,Many team managers are of the philosophy that if you throw enough mud at the wall some of it will stick. They believe that team preparation is all about physical fitness. They run the players into the ground and they believe they will be "flying on the day".2001, Robert McCrum, Let them eat cake, in The Observer 16 Dec 01, read on Guardian Unlimited site at on 02 Nov 06,Australian publishing boomed and in the past 10 years the country's literary culture has undergone a mini golden age, capped by Carey's triumph at the 2001 Booker Prize. As one Australian arts administrator said to me many years ago: 'Listen, mate, if you throw enough mud at the wall, some of it will stick.'2001, Chris Collin, Re: 2-cp speys on The Strathspey Server mailing list archive at on 02 Nov 06,I am finding that "if you throw enough mud at the wall, some of it will stick". It doesn't always work of course (especially on the nights when the class is mostly the beginners), but the class seems to thrive on the challange.2005, Ray Craft (poster on The right scale blog), Fitzhooie and his Burden, read at on 02 Nov 06,Prosecutors everywhere have bad habits of overcharging lots of cases, knowing that if the throw enough mud at the wall some of it will stick.2005, Sean Kelleher, Spike Milligan: His part in our downfall in Business 07 Aug 05, read at on 02 Nov 06,As long as there is negligible regulation and enforcement anyone can actually try and do the job...Weak regulation allows the industry to build strategies on full time recruitment. The theory goes: throw enough mud at the wall, some of it will stick.c2005, Everything You've Learned About Marketing Is Wrong, read on LINC Performance website at on 02 Nov 06,They have the money to continue to believe in the repetition side of the equation. You throw enough mud at the wall, some of it will stick. But it still isnRate it:

(3.00 / 4 votes)
toe-to-toePositioned facing another, with the toes touchingRate it:

(3.00 / 1 vote)
two wrongs make a rightA logical fallacy whereby a wrongful action is justified by the commission of anotherRate it:

(3.00 / 1 vote)
what's good for the goose is good for the ganderWhat is good for one type is equally good for another type, despite any irrelevant differences between the types.Rate it:

(3.00 / 1 vote)
under one's breathSoftly, so as not to be heard.Rate it:

(2.80 / 5 votes)
take a bulletto sacrifice oneself for another; to put oneself in harm's way in place of anotherRate it:

(2.67 / 3 votes)
come againCould you repeat that? Repeat that please. a polite formula used when one has not heard or understood what has been saidRate it:

(2.50 / 2 votes)
gain groundto become farther from another traveling the same course.Rate it:

(2.00 / 1 vote)
stand in someone's shoesTo see from another's point of view; to feel what another feels.Rate it:

(2.00 / 1 vote)
once you go black, you never go backAn expression assuming that once a person of another race gets in a sexual relationship with a black person they won't return to their own race.Rate it:

(1.83 / 6 votes)
wait for the other shoe to dropTo defer action or decision until another matter is finished or resolved.Rate it:

(1.50 / 2 votes)
black-on-blackInteractions that occur between black people, notably crime that is perpetrated by one black person against another.Rate it:

(1.25 / 4 votes)
brush byTo walk past another person, touching them slightly, normally by accident, and ignoring them.Rate it:

(1.00 / 1 vote)
build downIn solitaire card games, to place a card over another card of higher value.Rate it:

(1.00 / 1 vote)
check your ego at the door!A direct, crisp, critical rejoinder to another, 'to leave their egoism without the room', {at the door}!Rate it:

(1.00 / 2 votes)
he is always going off at a tangentHe always changes from a topic to another irrelevant oneRate it:

(1.00 / 1 vote)
les grosses mouches passent à travers la toile de la justice, mais les petites y sont prisesOne man may steal a horse, while another dare not look over the hedge; Justice will whip a beggar, but bow to a lord; One does the scath, another has the harm; The crow gets pardoned, and the dove has the blame.Rate it:

(1.00 / 1 vote)
long ways, long liesSomeone who comes back from a far-off country can tell lies without fear of being contradicted.Rate it:

(1.00 / 2 votes)
native soilThe country or geographical region where one was born or which one considers to be one's true homeland.Rate it:

(1.00 / 1 vote)
scape goatUsing another excuse for not taking the blame.Rate it:

(1.00 / 1 vote)
shotgunA one-story dwelling with no hallways or corridors, with the rooms arranged in a straight line. Mostly heard in the southern United States.Rate it:

(1.00 / 1 vote)
to say nothing ofused by the speaker to mention another more significant or important, usually related, point; an apophasisRate it:

(1.00 / 1 vote)
'tis an ill wind that blows no goodSimilar to "every cloud has a silver lining" or "one man's gain is another's loss". This expression appeared in John Heywood's 1546 proverb collection and remains so well known that it is often shortened. (www.dictionary.com}Rate it:

(0.00 / 0 votes)
à beau jeu beau retourOne good turn deserves another.Rate it:

(0.00 / 0 votes)
à l'heure qu'il est il doit savoir la nouvelleBy this time no doubt he has heard the news.Rate it:

(0.00 / 0 votes)
able to get a word in edgewiseAble to participate in the conversation; able to interrupt another person's monologue.Rate it:

(0.00 / 0 votes)
ad exemplum alicuius se conformareto shape one's conduct after another's model.Rate it:

(0.00 / 0 votes)

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Don't let the red _________ fool you.
A piranha
B herring
C mackerel
D tuna