This phrase means that someone must accept the consequences of their actions, even if they are unpleasant or challenging. It emphasizes personal responsibility and accountability for one's decisions.
It means you have done something that wasn't quite right, or perhaps you didn't think your actions/words through and now there are consequences for it, you have to deal with those consequences. You did something (you made your bed) now deal with it (now lie in it)
i will give u an example. if someone was really mean and then nobody was friends with that person and they got upset then you would say to them "you've made your bed so you must lie on it.
It means: You must suffer the consequences of your own decisions and actions.
The phrase "If you have made your bed, you can lie in it" means that you get what you deserve. In other words, if you do something, for ex. a chore, than you earn something. That something may not always be an object, it may be an opportunity, happiness, or forgiveness.
"You reap what you sow." "You've made your bed, now lie in it." "You create your own destiny." "You brought this upon yourself."
Yes, the sentence "Since you didn't take my advice you must make your own bed and lie in it" is logical. It means that because the person did not follow the advice given, they must take responsibility for the consequences of their actions.
You made a decision of some kind. Now you have to deal with the results of your decision. In other words, the uncomfortable place you now find yourself in is the result of your own choices.It means he is responsible for the situation so he should have to deal with it.This expression means, now that you have created this situation, you must take responsibility for it. :>)
"Lay down" is past tense. Present tense would be "lie down." You would say, "I lie down on my bed right now," which is in the present, but "I lay down on my bed yesterday," which is in the past. The verb itself is "lie," meaning to recline. The verb "lay" means to place something somewhere. You might say, "I lay the book on the table right now" (present tense), but "I laid the paper on the floor yesterday."
You are going to bed now
Not gunna li
It means tired, exhausted. E.g. "I am going to bed now. I'm all in."
Well it really matters what you lie about if you lie about. Perjury charges can get pretty high when you lie under oath. If you benefited by the lie, you will usually be required to pay back all of the benefit. If you lie on a Federal document, you can go to jail. If you lie about your education on a resume, you can lose the job and have to pay back what you had made.