"feather in the wind" - can you say that in English? And what does it mean?
It would mean that you put a feather into a cup. Perhaps you mean "a feather in your cap," which was a way of showing an achievement and has come to mean any achievement.
Sending a black feather can mean a great many things. Sometimes sending someone a black feather can mean wishing death on them.
think we're talking perception here... eg which is the heaviest - a ton of feathers or a ton of lead ??....
If you mean Hetty Feather by Jacqueline Wilson, Hetty Feather does not meat him.
A crow has lost a feather.
It mean's it has a zip or lost a zip, The zip is the line in the middle of the feather. UnZipped mean's it has no line in the middle, Look we have found a rare UnZipped feather.
You probably mean down, but down is not a feather, it is down.
huh? whadaya mean? there is the golden feather pin at the beacon! if that's what u mean
A feather in one's cap or hat mean an achievement you can be proud of. It originates from Native American people and how sometimes they would wear a feather as a sign of bravery.
Romeo says, "Feather of lead, bright smoke, cold fire, sick health!" He's playing with words, creating oxymorons for the fun of it. A "Feather of Lead" is something which is both light and heavy at the same time. It would have made a great name for a late-60s band, to go along with Led Zeppelin and Iron Butterfly.
They both weigh a ton