In ancient Rome criminals were made to go pound salt into the roadways to keep weeds and grass from growing it was hard labor in the hot sun. these so called criminals was usually someone who pissed of the wrong person so now when someone makes you mad you can tell go pound salt
Well, benai comes from a saying in french (moto benai) which means Lets go (in french)
Oh, dude, back in Victorian times, a pound could get you a bunch of stuff! You could probably buy like a fancy hat, a nice cup of tea, or maybe even a decent meal if you were lucky. But hey, inflation wasn't really a thing back then, so you were living the high life with that pound!
He can come and go to and from the Underworld anytime he pleases; for council on Olympus, for battles, and such of that like.
If you go here http://www.jasna.org/persuasions/printed/number12/heldman.htm it tells you what the pound was worth in 1810 to 1988 which was about 33 dollars then if you go to http://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/cpicalc.pl its an inflation calculator you find out that 33 dollars is roughly 60 dollars today. so if you times that by 500 it is worth about 30000.
cool the best hott espesially the ones with the enitials mmac their soo awsome girls go ga ga over those ones
go pound salt
It means to get lost
Get a life! Get lost! Go pound salt!
yes
"Easy come, easy go."
Actually, the correct phrase might be, "...when you come here." The word go is a word of distance, so you go to the store but you come home. And "came" is past tense for come, and it might be correct depending on the situation.
From people in tales talking about hell (inferno).
They watched them. They'd go to the theatre and come out saying, "That was a good play".
Please check your question for ambiguity and post again.
When does the old fifty pound note go out of circulation
Yes there is. The saying is "If you love someone, let them go...if they come back, they are yours. If they don't, it was never meant to be. Hope this helps! :)
You have to be at least 18 years old to go on The Million Pound Drop. :)