If you have a choice between going to school and taking an exam that you forgot to study for, or confessing to your parents that you're failing the class, then you're between the devil and the deep blue sea.
The expression is 'between the devil and the deep'. It was used by sailors who had to put pitch into the seams of a wooden sailing ship. It was a hard place to reach.
very drunk. By the time the party was over, he was cork high and bottle deep.
Charles Dickens actually suffered from deep depression?
Feeling sad. Having the "blues" may refer to blues music which was greatly soulful and expressionistic, deep with emotion, often sad. This idiom refers to that type of music.
In trouble, usually yet to come. "You'll be in hot water when your parents find out" To be in hot water is to be in immediate, deep trouble, as if someone were cooking us in a pot on the stove. The person "in hot water" did a particular thing that is sure to make another person mad at him or her.
Up a creek without a paddle means you are in deep trouble and there is nothing you can do about it. Your situation is quite hopeless, in other words. The image in this idiom is of a boat adrift in a river, with no paddles (oars) to steer with. It doesn't mean things are hopeless. It's just going to take more effort/time to get back home. If you ever find yourself up the creek be thankful you're not in a pickle
It means to be stuck between two equally horrible choices - as if you were in between Satan and the bottomless ocean, with nowhere else to go."Between the devil and the deep blue sea" is an idiom meaning a dilemma-to choose between two undesirable situations
The opposite of the idiom "between the devil and the deep blue sea" is "between a rock and a hard place." This phrase is used to describe a situation where someone is faced with two equally difficult choices.
This phrase means that someone is stuck between two equally challenging or undesirable situations, with no easy way out. They are faced with a difficult decision or dilemma with no good options available to them.
Simon and Simon - 1981 Caught Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea 3-7 was released on: USA: 10 November 1983
Devil of the Deep - 1938 was released on: USA: 27 May 1938
I hatethis
Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea - 1995 is rated/received certificates of: Argentina:13 Finland:K-12 Finland:K-11 (new rating: 2001) France:U Portugal:M/12 (Qualidade) Spain:13 Sweden:11
"Still waters run deep".
If you cheat on your wife you are in deep water. If you use a firearm while committing a robbery, you are in deep water.
Twixt the Devil and the Deep Sea - 1912 was released on: USA: 19 December 1912
This question was answered by Dr. Richard Lederer, the author of the books "The Play of Words," "Crazy English," et al. In his book "The Play of Words, Section I - METAPHORS," included in "Seaworthy Metaphors," Dr. Lederer points out that in sailing parlance the word devil refers to a nautical term for the seam between two planks in the hull of a ship, on or below the water line. If this is truly the case then, as Dr. Lederer points out, "Anyone who had to caulk such a 'devil' was figuratively caught between a rock and a hard place, or between..." THE DEVIL AND THE DEEP BLUE SEA.
very drunk. By the time the party was over, he was cork high and bottle deep.