"Cutting off the nose to spite the face" is an expression used to describe a needlessly self-destructive over-reaction to a problem: "Don't cut off your nose to spite your face" is a warning against pursuing revenge in a way that would damage oneself more than the object of one's anger.
The nouns are rain and face.
in spite
The word nose can be a noun and a verb. The noun form is the sensory organ on a human's face. The verb form means to snoop.
The sawdust was blowing into my face as I cut the plank.
No, "in spite" is two words.
'to spite'
It means that you do something in anger that will only hurt you
The saying "don't cut off your nose to spite your face" dates back to the 12th century. It originated from a story about a man who, in a fit of anger, cut off his nose to spite his own face. The phrase is used to caution against taking self-destructive actions out of spite or revenge.
It's actually two words, the proposition "in" and the word "spite". Spite is a motivation for doing mean or cruel or hurtful things, and often boils down to a kind of mean-spirited revenge. "To cut off your nose to spite your face" is an expression meaning that sometimes doing harm to another does greater harm to yourself. The "spite your face" part, means that you think you are doing something mean to your face by cutting off your nose. Spite is often the feeling we have when we say, "I'll show him!". It sometimes takes the form of wilful and peevish disobedience as a kind of revenge. It is this meaning that comes across in the phrase "in spite of". E.g. "My dad told me not to go to the party, but in spite of what he said, I went anyway." By extension, it can mean wilful and peevish disobedience to the common-sense dictates of reality. E.g. "In spite of the pouring rain, I determined to go tenting." The word "despite", which obviously comes from the same root, means exactly the same thing.
Think about cutting off your nose - it would hurt like heck and be really ugly and you couldn't breathe well afterwards. This idiom refers to doing something that ends up being worse for you than it was for the person you were trying to punish by doing it.
Hi there, Ive recently cut my nose after being elbowed in the face in a rugby match. It didn't break my nose but badly cut it. That was about 6 weeks ago and the cut has gone down but there is a mark on my nose and it's quite reddy. Is it a scar? If not, how long will take to go away?
Tell them not to groom his face and if they do not to cut around the nose.
Yes,,,, apples and pears are fruit, whereas ones nose is part of ones face
get a paper and start playing with it get it close to Ur nose and cut Ur nose its like getting a paper cut in Ur finger but instead its Ur nose
Aretha Wilson slashed him in the face with a beer bottle. It cut his left temple, gave him a black eye, broke his nose so bad that he had to have a plastic surgery and his nose was bleeding.
Your nose is the cartilage structure in the middle of your face, through which you can sense (smell) scent.
An example of an idiom in "To Kill a Mockingbird" chapter 21 is "cut off your nose to spite your face." This idiom means taking actions that harm oneself in order to punish or seek revenge on others. In the chapter, Atticus uses this idiom to explain why it would be foolish for Bob Ewell to challenge him.