There are many people that can eat you out of house and home. This is a very common phrase used.
It pretty much means that someone ate all of your food until you have no money left for food an your house, mostly it's just an expression used when someone eats a lot of someone else's food. Hope this helps
This is an incorrect quotation. The words "you" and "me" are not interchangeable, as you can clearly see in the sentence "I would like to see my wages paid to you." as opposed to "I would like to see my wages paid to me." The correct quotation is "he hath eaten me out of house and home." Mistress Quickly, in Shakespeare's play, Henry IV Part 2, is an innkeeper saddled with the unfortunate guest Sir John Falstaff, who never pays his bill. He is hugely fat and eats like a horse, so he is bankrupting her, which is what she means when she says this.
This is an incorrect quotation. The words "you" and "me" are not interchangeable, as you can clearly see in the sentence "I would like to see my wages paid to you." as opposed to "I would like to see my wages paid to me."The correct quotation appears in Henry IV Part 2, Act 2, Scene 1. Hostess Quickly comments "He hath eaten me out of house and home, he hath put all my substance into that fat belly of his: but I will have some of it out again, or I will ride thee a-nights like the mare." She is referring, of course, to Falstaff.
His home is shaped just like a pineapple .
Yes, if leaving your home was a term of a contract you have agreed to.
Henry the 6TH
None. The phrase 'He hath eaten me out of house and home" is from Henry IV Part 2 Act 2 Scene 1
Henry V. Henry V.
This is an incorrect quotation. The words "you" and "me" are not interchangeable, as you can clearly see in the sentence "I would like to see my wages paid to you." as opposed to "I would like to see my wages paid to me." The correct quotation is "He hath eaten me out of house and home", and it comes from Act II of Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part 2.
This phrase from Shakespeare's play "Henry IV, Part 2" is used to express frustration about someone eating all the food in the house and leaving nothing behind. The character is exaggerating to highlight how much food has been consumed.
Eaten, like "I have eaten all the cereal in the house," or "The chicken has been eaten."
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36%
After you have eaten the children.
That type of information is difficult, if not impossible, to determine. Most meals are eaten at home by the families. Eating out is still an exception rather than the rule.
A house could be any house, but a home is were you personly live.
A house could be any house, but a home is were you personly live.