When a person is asked to make a choice between two things and that person doesn't really have a preference. Its a "saying" that they might use.
For example:
Someone says to me "Should we eat at McDonalds or Burger King." If I don't care I might say, "six of one or half dozen of the other". Its a cute way of saying "as far as I'm concerned both choices are equal".
I think this is a shorter variation of "6 of one, half a dozen of the other" - basically that the choices are even.
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i can discern between a black person and a mix person.
It means "half as old." For ages, if one person is twice as old as another, the other person is half as old. A four-year-old car is half as old as an eight-year-old car.
The correct phrase is "Ninteen to the Dozen" and is often misquoted as "Ten to the dozen" which of course makes no sense as 10 is less than a dozen.
6/18
9
The expression is "six of one, half a dozen of the other" and means that no matter what you call something, it's still the same thing. It means about the same one way or another. It doesn't matter to me which way you do it. It's six of one and half a dozen of the other.
"Six of one, a half dozen of the other" means no matter how you say it, the answer is the same.
Since a half dozen is six, it means the each side or direction is equal to the other.
6 of one, half a dozen of anotherSix of one and half a dozen of another.
One dozen is 12 Half a dozen is 6
I think this is a shorter variation of "6 of one, half a dozen of the other" - basically that the choices are even.
A baker's half dozen is a group of seven items, the concept being that it is one more than a half dozen.
"Half a dozen = 6. So "six" and "half a dozen" are two ways of saying the same thing. The expression means that there is no important difference between the alternatives, or the differences offset one another so the net result is the same. For example, I say to my husband, "Should I take Highway 101 or Highway 280?" and he replies, "It's six of one and a half dozen of the other." He means that I'll get there in about the same amount of time whether I take one road or the other." The phrase, "Six to one, half a dozen to the other." is a UK variation of the phrase. This person's answer says much but conveys little. "Six of one, half a dozen of the other" is a reply to a question that solicits an evaluation between two choices. The person giving the reply is effectively saying "there is no difference between these two choices".
Basically, when someone says "Six of one, half dozen of another" they are saying that the two things they are comparing are the the same thing. They use this because: 1 Dozen = 12 1/2 dozen = 6 6 = 6 So, 1 half dozen and 6 are the same thing.
One dozen = 12 so half a dozen = 12/2 = 6. So simple!