It's "pie in the sky," and it originated in 1911 in a poem by Joe Hill. The poem told how preachers promised their followers that everything would be grand once they died and went to heaven, that they would have everything they wanted, including pie, "up in the sky" or in heaven.
because the sky is in the high so they are called the sky is high boto at putay
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The story called Why the Sky is High, by Hiligaynon, is a history tale. It tells the story of how the sky used to be low enough to touch with a stick, and why it is now too high to reach.
Yes
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"Sky high" just means very high. You usually hear this as "blown sky high," which would mean either (literally) something exploded and was thrown high in the air, or (figuratively) that someone's plans were thoroughly destroyed.
sky-high pie
This isn't an idiom - it's talking about some animal with their tail held high, flying behind them.
"Sky" and "pie" are words that rhyme with "high" and can also have meanings related to smoke, such as in phrases like "smoke up to the sky" or "smoking a pie."
The outside of the restaurant, Pie in the Sky, was filmed in the High Street of the Old Town in Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire.
Yes. High will rhyme with any word that ends in an "eye (i)" sound. High, sky, lie, fry, pie, cry, sigh, etc.
The cast of A Pie in the Sky - 1965 includes: Bob McFadden
Some words that rhyme with "high beams" include "sky dreams," "fly streams," and "pie schemes."
Pie in the Sky - 1994 Game Pie 3-2 is rated/received certificates of: UK:PG (video rating) (2011)
The Sky Is Up as Far as i Know the Pie can't be put up or it will fall The sky has a Heavy Package If you Throw Some thing It Will Come Back down . The Sky is More inportent in Life I Don't Care if Pie is Yummy To eat .. So there your Anwser is Sky
Something that is an absolute surprise.
People mean that it is the end of the world/