This is an old Italian proverb, and another way of saying "Let's make the best of a bad situation." The house is on fire, which is bad....but since it's already on fire, let's huddle up by it and at least we aren't cold, so for that we can be thankful. It's kind of a tongue-in-cheek way of saying "Every cloud has a silver lining."
to house troops, to give them a place to stay
The phrase is usually two words, show home, meaning a display model of a house.
It means that the person is charming in public and abusive at home to his family.
The word "house" meaning "a building" is a noun. The word "house" meaning "to put in a house" is a verb.
I first saw this word ('perbond') on a website and it really confused me a lot. Later, I realized that it was a mistake by the website's authors, and the word should've been "person's" (with an apostrophe 's'). If you read this phrase at the same website, then it should've been "person's house" instead of "perbond house". =)
This phrase means that a woman owns or has possession of a house located in the state of Virginia in the United States.
to house troops, to give them a place to stay
The phrase is usually two words, show home, meaning a display model of a house.
One common phrase I know using the word house is "a house is a house is a house is a house..."This one is on the house. (meaning free of charge)goin' to the big house (prison)
"Peace at home" is the meaning of the English phrase "domestic tranquility." The words typically may reference either a lack of discord among the residents of a family's house or within a nation.
It means that the person is charming in public and abusive at home to his family.
Power of the Purse is the control of the House of Commons over Public Expenditure.
There is no verb in "in the house?". "in the house?" is a prepositional phrase, consisting of a preposition, an indefinite article, and a noun. Since it doesn't have a verb, it isn't even a sentence at all.
Lost in the fun house is a phrase meaning the person keeps getting turned around and running into dead ends. The phrase is based after the popular carnival attraction.
This phrase from Shakespeare's "Macbeth" means that storms or troubles are brewing over their house, signifying impending danger or misfortune. The word "lour'd" suggests a sense of heaviness or darkness associated with the ominous clouds.
The 'object' of a preposition, like the 'object' of a verb, is the word upon which the meaning of the preposition or verb is acted. For example, in the prepositional phrase " to the house," the house is the object of the preposition to.
It means lets organize ourselves together, and form a group to to govern the people so that we can survive.