A 'dead man walking' is a person freely walking and moving (i.e. alive) but certainly very soon-to-be killed.
There is no such phrase. There is a word rampage. It is of Scottish origin, perhaps from RAMP, to rear up.
That is what Marlboro man answered Harley Davidson when he asked him how did it feel to be an old man. (Harley Davidson and Marlboro Man is an old movie with Mickey Rourke)
The Spanish for "I have put" is he puesto, could this be the origin?
well when girls get horny the get one
There is no such phrase as "eat you".
A 'dead man walking' is a person freely walking and moving (i.e. alive) but certainly very soon-to-be killed.
There is no such phrase. There is a word rampage. It is of Scottish origin, perhaps from RAMP, to rear up.
The phrase of Greek origin referring to the common people is "hoi polloi."
That is what Marlboro man answered Harley Davidson when he asked him how did it feel to be an old man. (Harley Davidson and Marlboro Man is an old movie with Mickey Rourke)
The phrase "A man, a plan, a canal, Panama!" is a famous palindrome. It reads the same backwards as it does forwards.
"on the rocks"
The Spanish for "I have put" is he puesto, could this be the origin?
well when girls get horny the get one
sumething
god
Canada