Street vendors that rely on pleasant outdoor weather for foot traffic (passersby) will "stay open" or "be here all day unless it rains"
From the Hood thats how we do. Aight its all good
The words are of Old English origin, the original for 'sundry' was 'syndrig' meaning separate and apart. In the 12th Century the phrase emerged meaning 'odds and ends'
They originate in parents, teachers, society
all above
All and all is a phrase it is not a part of speech. Words are parts of speech.I think the phrase should be all in all not all and all.All in all is used to introduce a summary or a general statement - All in all it was a good day.
leaves grow all the time (unless they are dead)
From the Hood thats how we do. Aight its all good
The words are of Old English origin, the original for 'sundry' was 'syndrig' meaning separate and apart. In the 12th Century the phrase emerged meaning 'odds and ends'
"And just like that, we're all in fright"?
Swedish immigrants in the US popularized it. It is short for 'All Correct' in Swedish - Ohl Korekt (sp?) There are alternate beliefs as to the origin.
"If ~A then ~B" where ~A means the opposite of A. For example if A is "it rains all week" and B is "it rains on Tuesday" then if A then B is "if it rains all week, it rains on Tuesday" while if ~A then ~B is "if it doesn't rain all week, it doesn't rain on Tuesday" which doesn't necessarily have the same truth value as the first.
By using the conjunction 'if', you make a phrase conditional and something further must be added relating to the condition. For example:You are all invited, even the children.You are all invited. Even if it rains, we'll have the party.
Yes because all fronts bring precipitation.
'In the black' and 'in the red' originate from classic accounting. Credits are entered in the journal in black ink, and debits are entered in red ink. After they are all totalled together, you are making a profit if your total is 'in the black'. If, however, the total is 'in the red', you are operating at a loss.
These are the first words in the book Commentarii de Bello Gallico by Julius Caesar, known to all second-year Latin students as Caesar's Gallic Wars.
Cats and dogs. (In Sweedish it rains "small nails" - not animals at all!)
All revenue, tax, and "money bills" originate in the House of Representatives