Lord Victor Quartermaine: Quick! I need another gold bullet!
Reverend Clement Hedges: They don't come cheap, you know!
Refering to the fact that gold is precious and very expensive.
"It's alluded to" is one English equivalent of the Italian phrase S'allude.Specifically, the reflexive pronoun si* means "her/him/it/one/yourself" depending upon context. The verb allude translates as "alludes, does allude, is alluding". The pronunciation will be "sal-LOO-dey" in Italian.*The vowel drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a verb which begins with a vowel.
The election year that saw bumper stickers reading "Wallace Wallace Uber Alles" was 1968. The stickers were in support of the segregationist George Wallace, who ran as a third-party candidate for the American Independent Party. "Uber alles" is a German phrase meaning "above everything" or "above all," which was used to emphasize Wallace's extreme views.
Wallace Broecker from Columbia University is said to have "coined" the term Global Warming.
I don't think any have used it. The phrase is from a poem by William Ross Wallace and was first published in 1865 under the title What Rules the World. It was used by Hollywood in 1992 in a movie.
This phrase may refer to nonverbal communication, where people convey messages through body language, facial expressions, and gestures. It can also allude to deep emotional connection or understanding between individuals that transcends words.
This phrase means that those who influence and nurture individuals, such as mothers or caregivers, have great power and impact over the future. It emphasizes the importance of raising and educating children, as they are the future leaders of the world.
1. noun phrase 2. adjectival phrase 3. adverbial phrase 4. verbal phrase
Adverb phrase
An antecedent phrase is an opening phrase in a piece of music - followed by a consequent phrase, which "answers" the opening phrase.
It was a turn of phrase.I have lost my phrase book.A phrase is not a phase.A phrase is not a praise either.I wonder what the phrase means?
Infinite phrase
The phrase, "inside the skeleton" is a type of adverbial phrase. In other words, it is a type of prepositional phrase.