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You could say "curiosity killed the cat," meaning that it's not wise to be too curious.
You mean "let the cat out of the bag" -- it doesn't work if you don't use those exact words. It means to tell something that was supposed to be a secret. The original term was a literal one -- people would sell what they claimed was a piglet, put into a bag to be easily carried, but instead of a valuable pig that could be eaten, they'd put a cat into a bag instead, and save the piglet to "sell" again. If you "let the cat out of the bag," you exposed the scam to everyone.
It means that if you put something that doesn't belong into the picture, things are not going to end well.
You don't need help - LITERAL means that whatever the words say is what the phrase means. "Raining cats and dogs" would mean that cats and dogs fell out of the sky.If you want IDIOMATIC or FIGURATIVE meanings, click on the related question.
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A calm mellow cat. Since you posted in idioms, I assume you mean the slang to describe a person. It means someone is hip, with-it, etc. Mostly used in jazz type clubs.
An idiom is a phrase or expression that typically cannot be understood by the literal meanings of its individual words. Idioms have a cultural or figurative meaning that differs from the literal interpretation. Examples include "kick the bucket" meaning to die, or "raining cats and dogs" meaning heavy rain.
When you are speaking with people from the same native area as you so that common sayings or "expressions" aren't taken literal but their figurative meaning is well known. "Kick the bucket" "The cat's out of the bag"
say or do something likely to cause trouble or controversy.Example : Tell them all they've got to work on Saturday. That should set the cat among the pigeons.
Yes. An idiom is a phrase or expression whose meaning is figurative rather than literal. The phrase has a meaning other than the usual meaning of the words.
The cat is in the bag and the bag is in the river.The cat is drowning or already drowned.ANS2:That would be an ailurophobe's analogy for describing how a solution to a problem has been devised and implemented.
The phrase "cat out of the bag" means a secret or surprise has been revealed, usually unintentionally. It stems from times when people would sell piglets in bags, and sometimes dishonest sellers would substitute a cat. If the cat escaped from the bag, the trickery would be exposed.