It mean that people will do just what's popular that day/week/etc. Which ever way the "winds blowing"
"By and large" means "on the whole", "generally speaking", "all things considered".The phrase actually comes from a nautical term roughly meaning against the wind i.e. difficult (by) and with the wind i.e. easy (large).Here's a more in-depth answer : http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/by-and-large.html
the meaning of the phrase myriad manifestation is-countless evidence
"feather in the wind" - can you say that in English? And what does it mean?
That's easy! Its a phrase.
A phrase that is compound. Meaning two or more.
When you wet your finger and hold it in the air you can determine wind direction, if there is in fact wind, because the wind blows against your finger and chills the fluids on your finger. Therefore, whatever part of you finger is cold, in the direction the wind is coming from.
In the wind is the prepositional phrase.
In the wind is the prepositional phrase.
"The answer, my friend, is blowing in the wind. The answer is blowing in the wind."
The wind. The wind is given human features -- gripped and finger tips
You can determine wind direction by wetting your finger and holding it up in the air and feeling which side of your finger is being hit by the air. This would mean that the wind is coming from that direction.
In Stevenson's poem "The Vagabond," biting the blue finger refers to an experience of cold weather or numbness, particularly in the extremities. The phrase conveys a physical sensation of discomfort or pain.
it is a cow finger the thum can bend and bread the forse and drecshion of the wind.
when your finger is wet in the wind, the wind dries one side quicker than the other, and the side that is dry more quickly is the direction that the wind is coming from, since air can dry out water.
The phrase is 'index finger', so it is two words.
by putting your finger in your mouth and taking it out and if your finger drys that means it is not cold
in the wind