it means a drunk man would say what a sober man could not say
No, it is not. It is a verb, the present tense, third person singular form of the verb "to say."
When you reply to something you are saying something as a result of somene saying something else. Your response to something is what you do, ever saying, thinking or acting as a result of somene elses actions,ever saying something or doeng something.
No, it is not grammatically correct to say, 'revert back to'. You would simply say 'revert', as in 'Can we revert to the previous subject?' Revert means to go back (to something), so saying 'revert back to' is saying the same thing twice, which is called tautology.
Yes, 'you can' does make sense; you're simply saying 'able to [do something]'. A person might say, 'You can visit the library,'.
i love you You tell them you like something about them- complement them on something they do or the way they look or something like that.
Pinch myself everytime im about to say something got to do with that suprise.
He is inferring something or foreshadowing something.
Say, Say, Say by Paul McCartney and Michael Jackson.
yes........... why?
Maybe you should say it. Let it just 'slip' and if the response in undesirable, pretend you didn't realize you said it. Tell him it's a 'systematic response' or something you are so used to saying to your mom or brother or someone and then go from there.
there is nothing evil worth saying.
something
have sex with his woman or man.
If you're writing, you could say "the author" or "Yours Truly."
just say you are looking gorgeous, or marvellous
I don't think there is a big difference, but a saying is something that people say but they say it in a different way and a phrase is a short group of words that people often use as a way of referring to something or saying something. So no, I don't think that there is a difference.