Cotton is found anywhere seed pods are grown.
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This phrase dates from somewhere in the 16th Century. Originally, it was a textile term - to "cotton" or "cotton well" referred to the success of the fibers melding together to form cotton cloth. Around the 16th Century, the phrase began to be used to mean "to be successful," or "to prosper" in reference to people and things. About the 19th Century, the phrase "to cotton to" began to see use, and meant "to be drawn to" or "to get along with." If you do not "cotton to" something, then you don't care for it. This phrase is particularly common in the South, where the cotton industry formed the basis for the economy for many years.
Cotton grows on shrubs, where it originates.
The phrase "he bought cotton" means that someone purchased cotton material. Cotton is a soft, fluffy fiber commonly used in textile production.
There is no such phrase as "eat you".
There is no such phrase. There is a word rampage. It is of Scottish origin, perhaps from RAMP, to rear up.
wacka
"on the rocks"
wool u just use it
The Spanish for "I have put" is he puesto, could this be the origin?
The phrase "cotton is king" refers to the significance of cotton production in the economy of the southern United States before the Civil War. Cotton was a major cash crop that drove the region's economy and played a central role in shaping Southern society and politics. The phrase emphasized the economic and social power that cotton production held in the antebellum South.
Percale is a treatment for cotton. Your phrase 100 percent indicates the composition of cotton is 100 percent.