"Pick your daisies" is an idiomatic expression that typically means to make a choice or selection from a variety of options. It often conveys a sense of playfulness or lightness, as if one is casually choosing something enjoyable or whimsical. The phrase can also imply taking time to enjoy the process of selection rather than rushing into a decision.
you just walk over the daisie.
TV Reader's Digest - 1955 I'll Pick More Daisies - 1.5 was released on: USA: 14 February 1955
The ratio of daisies to roses can be expressed as 9:16. This means for every 9 daisies, there are 16 roses. You can also simplify this ratio, but in this case, it is already in its simplest form.
Daisies is the plural of daisy.Two example sentences with "daises" are:She likes to pick daises to make a daisy chain.The field was full of daises as far as the eye could see.
Why was she feeling this way
One idiom for flowers is "pushing up daisies". This means to be dead or buried. This originated when people put daisies on graves in cemeteries.
It means you're dead and buried, hence "Pushing up Daisies." "Pushing up daisies" is a euphemism for being dead (and buried). It refers to the wild flowers that would sprout in the mound of dirt covering a fresh grave.
daisies mean be my friend. :)
Daisies is the plural form of daisy. The plural possessive is daisies'.
daisies mean be my friend. :)
Yes all daisies are flowers. But not all flowers are daisies.
Collective nouns are a bed of daisies or a bouquet of daisies.