Where I'm from, it means that you had a talent that could have taken you in another direction in life, but didn't.
Usually said sarcastically:
e.g. watching a nurse friend warbling away badly in a Karaoke bar "you've missed your calling, Barbra"
It means that they missed you. They wished that you were there.
Participle phrases always function as adjectives, adding description to the sentence.So in the sentence "Charging at the red cloak, the bull missed his mark"Charging at the red cloak would be the participal phrase.
The entire phrase is "Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words can never harm me." It means that someone who is childishly calling names and insulting you cannot harm you.
what does the phrase There`s ruin in store for you mean
verb phrase
'& me i missed you'
It means that they missed you. They wished that you were there.
It means that they missed you. They wished that you were there.
Elided
It means he missed you.
In the phrase, "Charging at the red cloak, the bull missed his mark," the participle phrase is "charging at the red cloak." It is a participle phrase because it works as an adjective in the sentence.
It means "If only you knew how much I've missed you dude/big man"
2pm but you missed her, she just left.
The phrase «What's shakin' bacon» is foremost a play with rhymes.«what's shakin'» means «What's going on?» or «What's up?».«bacon» makes the whole phrase rhyme, and depending on context, may be either intended as humor or an insult (calling the other person a pig or calling them fat.)
No. Missed shipment is two words. missed is the past tense of miss shipment is a noun As a phrase missed shipment could be used like: The missed shipment arrived this morning. The supplier missed a shipment last month
The idiom down to the wire means to the very last possible moment. Therefore, the entire phrase would stand to mean that "it went to the very last split second and we almost missed your flight, but made it."
The phrase "Integrity Violation" generally refers to someone being dishonest or deceptive about something. Calling someone an integrity violator would be the same as calling them a liar.