No, it's figurative. You could say it sarcastically, if you wanted to suggest that time moves slowly when you're having fun. In either case, of course, time moves at the same pace.
from the flies on the soft watches in Salvador Dali's masterpiece The Persistence of Memory watches,clocks = time and the flies are actual insects.
It's a simile meaning "in great abundance". A sorghum mill is a place where sorghum is made - a syrupy type of sweetener made from the sorghum plant. As flies are generally attracted to sweet, sugary substances, you can imagine how many flies would be hanging around a sorghum mill. Hence the expression.
...from the audience.
The collective nouns for flies are:a business of fliesa cloud of fliesa grist of fliesa hatch of fliesa swarm of flies
The phrase is spelled "Time flies." It means that things happen more quickly than we expect, and in retrospect, a long passage of time seems shorter.
Find youself la
someone who was probably at work and was ready to leave and was saying an idiom
Because flies time when they're having fun.
because time flies when your having fun
because time flies when your having fun
Funny How Time Flies - When You're Having Fun - was created in 1987-11.
from the flies on the soft watches in Salvador Dali's masterpiece The Persistence of Memory watches,clocks = time and the flies are actual insects.
Them saying is you can catch more flies with honey.
because time flies when your having fun
That saying means that time elapses so fast it is like an arrow which flies through the air at a fast rate of speed. But, I believe that saying has a second part to it which is "fruit flies like a banana." It is supposed to be a play on words, because flies in the first part is a verb and flies in the second part is a noun.
'Cause flies time when they're having fun!
Your answer is A