It is generally accepted as referring to the fact that a three rolled in most dice games is a losing roll; "keeps coming up threes" is a run of bad luck
The Phrase "It is as handy as it is becoming" means it is as useful as it is up and coming.
I am from cental Wisconsin. I am not certain what the origin of the phrase is but it was commonly used by my father and grandfather
Maybe along the same lines of having a stick or bug up you're butt. Basically you're ornery or barky.
I googled it and nothing really came up except this. I started using this saying and then I googled it and it turns out I didn't make it up! Happy googling!
If you have ever tried to wind a garden hose back to its original position after watering several gardens, you know exactly how this phrase came to be. The hose gets tangled in every which way and absolutely refuses to lay in the perfect rings from wince it came. You end up with a tangle of semi-similiar revolutions of garden hose. Hence the phrase: all hosed up.
This is a phrase that Yogi Berra said
Most likely coincidence. There are plenty of examples of things that come in threes in everyday life - it's not that strange to come across them in succession.
Yes, it is possible.
They don't. Five threes add up to 15 and that is it! You can write an expression using 5 threes that makes 100, but that is not the same.
The Phrase "It is as handy as it is becoming" means it is as useful as it is up and coming.
who was the first person to come up with the phrase "for the people,for th people,by the people"?
they come out at about when the sun is just coming up
A.E Waite says that when 4 threes comes up it signals "Progress"
I think that you mean "Up and at 'em". I believe this saying came from the great war of 1914, when the troops came up out of the trenches to advance on the enemy. The cry "Up and at 'em boys" would have given the troops encouragement.
fhugfdghgfdcfgvvrgtyfhdcgfhv
The phrase was "Arriba, arriba, ándele" (Spoken by Speedy Gonzales) and means "up, up, come on" or perhaps, "up, up, away".
The rule of three is a writing principle that suggests that things that come in threes are inherently funnier, more satisfying, or more effective than other numbers of things. The reader or audience of this form of text is also more likely to consume information if it is written in groups of threes. From slogans ("Go, fight, win!") to films, many things are structured in threes. Examples include The Three Stooges, Three Little Pigs, Three Billy Goats Gruff, Goldilocks and the Three Bears, and Three Blind Mice.A series of three often creates a progression in which the tension is created, built up, and finally released. Similarly, adjectives are often grouped in threes to emphasize an idea.The Latin phrase, "omne trium perfectum" (everything that comes in threes is perfect, or, every set of three is complete) conveys the same idea as the rule of three.