Well, honey, blowing air up your skirt is just a colorful way of saying someone is trying to manipulate or deceive you. It's like trying to pull a fast one or play a trick on you. So, if someone's blowing air up your skirt, you better watch out for their shenanigans.
I think it means the same as pull the wool over my eyes.
The spelling is "wind" (the same as the homograph meaning blowing air).The word is pronounced the same as wined and whined.
north
"She hiked up her skirt and stared at her boss provocatively."
fan
I think it means the same as pull the wool over my eyes.
Well, darling, "blowing smoke up your skirt" is just a fancy way of saying someone is trying to deceive or flatter you. It originates from the idea of someone literally blowing smoke up your skirt to make you think something is happening when it's really just a bunch of hot air. So next time someone tries to pull that stunt on you, just give them a wink and show them you're not falling for it.
"Blow smoke up your skirt" is an idiomatic expression that means to flatter someone insincerely or to deceive them with empty praise or false information. It often implies that the person being flattered is being misled or manipulated. The phrase suggests that the flattery is superficial and not to be taken seriously, akin to blowing smoke that obscures the truth.
Air, just with no oxygen in it. its a mix of gases carbon is one
I have the exact same problem, since they banned tight skirts at my school, but, maybe take safety pins and put them on the inside, or somthing that will weigh it down :) xx OR! Attach some velcro (If you wear tights) to your tights and skirt :) x
whatta?
Most of the time the air compressor is locked up.
Yes, blowing up a balloon and letting the air out are physical changes. In both cases, the balloon's shape and size are altered, but its chemical composition remains the same.
Blowing up a balloon is not an example of diffusion. Diffusion is the movement of particles from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration, while blowing up a balloon involves forcing air into the balloon using pressure.
The longest time keeping a Malteser up in the air by blowing it is 7.44 seconds, achieved by Ashrita Furman at the Sri Chinmoy Centre in New York City on December 9, 2017.
Yes, balloons filled with helium will be buoyant in air
yea totaly! :D