You could say it that way because it is correct but it is usually stated as hand to hand combat.
A teacher once said that it was facing to the god's right hand
your right
This phrase means that when you face darkness or emptiness, it can also reveal things about yourself that you may not have been aware of before.
There is no phrase to be said. The person may be called indigent.
Snap! Or that's what she said! Definitely that's what she said
When ordered a half-left or half-right turn you turn 45° in the said direction
Chances are, the phrase you are looking for is giving a face to, not giving face to (although the latter could conceivably be a variant on giving head, a colloquialism for oral sex). To give a face to something, such as for example the environmentalist movement, would be to offer some person or other visible symbol by which we can think of or visualize it. So, Ralph Nader could be said to be the face of environmentalism.
you said
The phrase "go said" does not make any sense, and does not occur in the Bible.
Chances are, the phrase you are looking for is giving a face to, not giving face to (although the latter could conceivably be a variant on giving head, a colloquialism for oral sex). To give a face to something, such as for example the environmentalist movement, would be to offer some person or other visible symbol by which we can think of or visualize it. So, Ralph Nader could be said to be the face of environmentalism.
Well, phrase it differently - Who said colours aren'tcolours?
The phrase "We have met the enemy, and they are ours" was said by Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry after the Battle of Lake Erie during the War of 1812. Perry delivered this message in a report to General William Henry Harrison on September 10, 1813, following his decisive victory over the British fleet. The phrase has since become a famous expression of determination and resilience in the face of adversity.