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Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This meant a large mosquito. It was so big it would nip at your gallbladder when it bit you.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This meant to associate with. A pal was your friend, so you would pal on someone and hang around them.
she wishes she would have left him earlier so that they would not be so hurt because they are in love with eachother, but after she is a vampire, she is in love with only edward.
The phrase meant "Work sets you free." It was there so internees felt their was hope if they worked hard.
well the so and so phrase comes from Italy from people that are pissed off at someone else........... in Italy, criminals use the phrase so and so to get their head chopped off above a pirate ship. but before they used so and so the phrase, they used to use the phrase im an idiot in Greece to get their head chopped off in front of a fire truck. the Italians thought it was smart so they made their own phrase. now the phrase so and so is popular for being smart!! This will help revision tes,t history test and S.A's.
My mother said this a lot when she meant something or someone would always be there. Said that Pat was a popular or #1 name of the men at war during WWII. So, there would always be a Pat in the Army.
The object is something that you would approve of or would in flatter you.
They were originally told orally, so they were told from generation to generation. People would travel and take these stories with them so they told them to others and those people told others and so on.
So this phrase translates to "Very good, my friend". So if your friend figures something out like who you have a crush on you can tell them this phrase. Its an awkward sentence and you would only use it where you would use it in english.
Years ago, there was a house on a back road miles out from dairy to scalp mountain or somewhere. Kate Logue lived there and the phrase came from that! Or so I'm told.
Either or, but "psychic who told them" is more proper. The psychic is a person, so 'who' is preferred.
I could tell you if you told me the Latin words.