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Phrases related to: know every trick in the book Page #5

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water is exceeding up the headwhen every thing goes wrong and nothing is controlableRate it:

(5.00 / 2 votes)
when you're right, you're right, right-right.You know your right not wrongRate it:

(5.00 / 1 vote)
work against the clockTo work very quickly because you know you only have a very limited period of time to do something.Rate it:

(5.00 / 1 vote)
you ask me, I ask whoI don't know, how should I knowRate it:

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you have the advantage over meYou know my name, but I do not know yours; what is it, please?; you know me but I do not know youRate it:

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lick someone's assTo flatter someone (especially a superior) in an obsequious manner, and to support their every opinionRate it:

(4.67 / 3 votes)
put one overTo fool, trick or deceive.Rate it:

(4.67 / 3 votes)
"never mind your mother sonny.... eat your bleedin' orange"I worked with a man from Foulridge, Lancashire for over 35 years who often used this phrase whenever there was a problem and he wasn't sure of the answer!.. Said the phrase came from a "chap I used to work with in Colne... but he didn't know what it meant either"Rate it:

(4.00 / 2 votes)
hic liber est de amicitia (not agit) or hoc libro agitur de am.the book treats of friendship.Rate it:

(4.00 / 1 vote)
if it's yellow let it mellowIn order to save water, do not flush the toilet every time you urinate.Rate it:

(4.00 / 2 votes)
leave no stone unturnedTo search thoroughly for something, looking in every conceivable place.Rate it:

(4.00 / 5 votes)
reach a critical massWhen one works, reworks, tries every trick in the book, one can attain the verge of an explosion.Rate it:

(4.00 / 1 vote)
turn the pageTo proceed to the next page in a book.Rate it:

(4.00 / 1 vote)
bend somebody's earSorry to bend your ear with the whole story, but I think you ought to know.Rate it:

(3.50 / 2 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)
stop an eight-day clock and throw it into reverseBefore batteries and household electricity were used to power clocks, most clocks had to be wound by hand to keep operating. Eight-day clocks were designed so they only had to be wound every eighth day and the movement only turned in a clockwise direction. Therefore, someone with an appearance objectionable enough to stop the clock and send the movement spinning in the wrong and opposite direction would be ugly indeed.Rate it:

(3.50 / 4 votes)
year in, year outDuring every year; always.Rate it:

(3.50 / 2 votes)
time after timeAgain and again; repeatedly; every time; always.Rate it:

(3.33 / 3 votes)
block offTo book, set aside.Rate it:

(3.00 / 1 vote)
ignorance is blissLack of knowledge results in happinessSometime you are more comfortable if you dont know something.Rate it:

(3.00 / 2 votes)
nobody's perfectUsed when someone's mistakes or flaws are acknowledged, to remind that everyone else makes mistakes and has flaws1995, New York Magazine Vol. 28, No. 5, 30 January 1995, The de-moralization of society (Book Review)Hypocrisy, particularly in sexual matters, is excused on the grounds that hey, nobody's perfect, and at least folks back then felt bad enough to lie.2000, Madonna, Nobody's PerfectI feel so sad. What I did wasn't right. I feel so bad and I must say to you: Sorry, but nobody's perfect. Nobody's perfect. What did you expect? I'm doing my bestRate it:

(3.00 / 1 vote)
tell apartTo be able to know the difference between things; to distinguish.Rate it:

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vous ne savez pas où le bât le blesseYou do not know where the shoe pinches him.Rate it:

(3.00 / 1 vote)
money creates loveWhen you are in state of success in every aspect of you life meaning that one success brings the other like a dominoRate it:

(2.67 / 3 votes)
"...three philosophical problems that are ineliminable from any version of theism"the phrase comes from a philosophical book (by Alasdair MacIntyre, professor at Notre Dame University)Rate it:

(2.00 / 3 votes)
do something with mirrorsTo insinuate one has performed a magic or optical trick with the use of hidden mirrors, insinuating trickery and sham.Rate it:

(2.00 / 1 vote)
quand l'arbre est tombé tout le monde court aux branchesWhen the tree falls every one goeth to it with his hatchet.Rate it:

(2.00 / 1 vote)
wait on someone hand and footTo attend to every need, to the point of excess.Rate it:

(2.00 / 2 votes)
put one pastTo deceive, trick, or fool, especially by concealing something.Rate it:

(1.50 / 2 votes)
who do you think you are, you've not been to cardiff?You dont know anything. You have no knowkedge of the world or any wisdom.Rate it:

(1.50 / 2 votes)
dunnoEquivalent to, eg: "I don't know".Rate it:

(1.00 / 1 vote)
fuck knowsI don't know; nobody knows; it is unclear.Rate it:

(1.00 / 1 vote)
j'ai mis ce livre de côté à voire intentionI put that book on one side especially for you (to read, to see).Rate it:

(1.00 / 1 vote)
je ne sais plus où j'en suis1. I have lost the place where I left off (in reading, etc.). 2. I do not know what I am about.Rate it:

(1.00 / 1 vote)
lionThe arms of the University of the West Indies are Barry wavy of six Argent and Azure an open Book proper bound Gules garnished Or on a Chief of the third a Lion passant guardant Erminois. Crest: A Pelican proper. . See talk page.Rate it:

(1.00 / 1 vote)
Pull the Wool over Your EyesTo play trick with someone making him or her fool, to deceive or cheat someoneRate it:

(1.00 / 1 vote)
the jetset wayThe JetSet Way is the only way. People who live this way are straight alpha/sigma males and have the ability at will to ethically attain any and every woman they shall desire, own any car they shall want, wear whatever brand clothes they want, get VIP access everywhere and will spend more time on planes traveling to foreign countries than they do at their home. The Jet Set Way was coined by JetSetFly (also known as Josh King Madrid) himself.Rate 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:

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à chacun son compteTo give every one his due.Rate it:

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à chacun son dûGive the devil his due; Every man is worth his hire.Rate it:

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à chacun son tourEvery dog has his day; Now it is my turn.Rate it:

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à chaque saint sa chandelleHonour to whom honour is due; Every lawyer must have his fee.Rate it:

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a mão esquerda não sabe o que faz a direitathe left hand doesn't know what the right hand is doingRate it:

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à qui le dites-vous?Am I not perfectly aware of it? Don’t I know it?Rate it:

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a tear jerkerA movie, book or story that is sad and causes one to cry.Rate it:

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accepimuswe know; we have been told.Rate it:

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according toAccording to him, every person was to be bought. - Thomas Babington Macaulay.Rate it:

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aliquid compertum habereto know a thing for certain.Rate it:

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aliquid in commentarios suos referre (Tusc. 3. 22. 54)to enter a thing in one's note-book.Rate it:

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alternis diebusevery other day.Rate it:

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