I believe the phrase is actually " got a good do on it" which means something was done well
un icspeshin
Perhaps you mean "he's got it IN for me," which means he plans to harm me personally.
It means you look good, cool, or you got the fashion.
Etymology: from the old days when miners held boxing matches; the winner got money, the loser got a ham and egg meal
it means that the fluffy dinasour got flushed down the toilet by a teddy bear then bye bye
nvm got the answer
It turns keys into Mountain dew cans. They still count as keys, but but get the sound effect as if you got a MD can. hope this helps.
un icspeshin
In the King James version * The phrase get full is not mentioned * The phrase got full is not mentioned
Perhaps you mean "he's got it IN for me," which means he plans to harm me personally.
it means you just got it just in time.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This means very, a great deal, much or good. A good cowboy got a right smart bit of work done during a day.
To be bold and confident in your actions. To give it all you got. To vigorously stay the course.
It means you look good, cool, or you got the fashion.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This meant to have the advantage. If you got the bulge on a bad man, you could take his gun away.
Tu as de la monnaie? means - Have you got any change? (coins)
The phrase "when she got down" is an adverbial clause. Specifically, it functions as an adverbial clause of time, providing information about when the action in the main clause (she got down) occurred.