having no heart rate. basically dying
Well the phrase comes from the saying "Every cloud has a silver lining" which means every problem (the cloud) has something good from it (the silver lining) so basically that person is saying you dont look at the good side of bad things
Yes, but the phrase is "on the same plane". In this case, "plane" does not mean aircraft, but flat level or surface, and the phrase means "on the same level of existance, consciousness or development".
There are many phrases that mean the same thing... 'There is always hope' - 'Onwards and upwards' - 'Positive mental attitude' - 'are just three exampless.
I am aware of the literary example in Milton's Comus but there must have been an original meaning he borrowed when he wrote Comus. This phrase originated during the American Civil War. Today this phrase is one of hope and optimism-i.e. though the skies are dark, something good is still there. Originally though, this phrase would have meant just the opposite. The "cloud" referred to was the plumes of smoke from the enemy artillery, and the "silver lining" was the glint of morning sun off the artillery in the background. Since many of the battles would start just before dawn, the soldiers were sometimes facing a confusing look at fog and smoke, in the predawn light. The veteran soldiers would tell the newcomers-"avoid the clouds with the silver lining", and soon those rookies would learn that "not every cloud has a silver lining" meaning they could head for the fog, which was doubly better as the haze was not from the artillery, and the fog itself offered some concealment. When the soldiers came home from the war, they would sometimes use the phrase "not every cloud has a silver lining" to mean that there were sometimes unexpected good things; but through the course of usage by those not knowledgeable of its origins, the "not" was soon dropped from the phrase.
what does the phrase There`s ruin in store for you mean
Flat-lining is sewing your the lining and shell pieces of your project (wrong sides together) before you assemble. You then treat the flat lined piece as one; flat lining allows for a heavier weight to the material which can aid construction. Your question doesn't state whether this is part of the pattern instructions, but I am assuming it calls for flat-lining prior to assembling any of the pieces.
"Level with the ground" means that something is parallel or in alignment with the surface of the ground, without any slant or incline. It refers to a position where the object is flat and even with the horizontal plane.
Flat Out - To collapse, to prove a failure.
Well the phrase comes from the saying "Every cloud has a silver lining" which means every problem (the cloud) has something good from it (the silver lining) so basically that person is saying you dont look at the good side of bad things
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This is another funny way of saying he was eating. A flue is the inside of a chimney.
a) When someone steps on the back of another person's shoe so that their heel pops out, they have given that person a "flat tire." Or b) A saggy butt is a "flat tire."
Yes, but the phrase is "on the same plane". In this case, "plane" does not mean aircraft, but flat level or surface, and the phrase means "on the same level of existance, consciousness or development".
It is a way of saying not just that each cloud has a silver lining, but that it was sent to rain on your parade for a reason.
There are many phrases that mean the same thing... 'There is always hope' - 'Onwards and upwards' - 'Positive mental attitude' - 'are just three exampless.
The mucosa is the lining of the stomach, and the antrum is part of the stomach. Erythema is redness, and an ulceration is an area in which a layer of skin or lining is missing. So "muscosal inflammation in the antrum with erythema and ulcerations" is stomach ulcers.
flat
flat line means when there is not a heart beat so the line is flat.