this isn't a pipe - the sentence was made famous by René Magritte, a surrealist painter, when he painted it underneath the picture of a pipe.
"Oh! my nest!" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Ah! mon nid! The pronunciation of the masculine singular phrase -- which also translates as "Oh! my den!" and "Oh! my love-nest!" -- will be "ah moh nee" in French.
It just means really messy I guess.
le nid = nest nicher = to nest
nest in french is : Nid
AZ lovre nest is "un nid d'amour" in French.
The French term, une niche (fem. noun): means a doghouse in English.The related French verb, nicher, applies to birds and, in English, means to nest.
Birds fly the nest when they have sufficiently developed abilities to fly and find food. The phrase "fly the coop" is often used as a metaphor describing when children leave the parental home.
The phrase "out to butter his own nest" means that someone is acting in a selfish manner to secure personal gain or benefit. It implies that the person is primarily concerned with their own interests and is not considering the well-being of others.
A hornet's nest is "un nid de frelons" in French. Figuratively we use 'un nid de guêpes' (wasps) when talking about a tricky situation.
she is not fat: elle nest pas grosse she is not thin: elle nest pas mince
eagle's nest
You mean what rhymes with nest? there's a lot of things that rhymes with nest: test, best, vest, pest, lest, and a lot more