It comes from ancient times when familys used to purchase burial plots for their family before they had even died. Someone walking over your grave shows disrespect, and in oldren times, walking over a persons grave who has not yet deceased, meant you wished them ill.
There's an old expression, or superstition, that if you get a sudden unexplained chill or shudder, someone just stepped on your grave. This means your future grave, the place where you will eventually be buried. Since most people don't know exactly where that's going to be, it's a deliberately creepy idea, a mystery like the reason for the chill.
It's just a vivid phrase to mean that you got a sudden attack of goosebumps or a shiver - the image is of your grave already being out there somewhere waiting for you to die, and someone just walked over it.
It was a custom to plant daisies over the grave of a loved one.
Generally it means that if something is done contrary to which the deceased person would object to, their spirit would be disturbed.
I think it means the same as pull the wool over my eyes.
I dont know what the origin is. Earliest reference to it I remember is Alanis Morisette in Head over feet. I'm too youg to have heard that sort of expression much earlier. Anyone seen references to it before alanis?
When Aunt Alexandra says "somebody just walked over my grave," she is expressing that she felt a sudden chill or shiver, as if someone had walked over the spot where she will be buried. This phrase is often used to describe a feeling of foreboding or unease.
It's just a vivid phrase to mean that you got a sudden attack of goosebumps or a shiver - the image is of your grave already being out there somewhere waiting for you to die, and someone just walked over it.
The phrase "If he were alive he would be rolling over in his grave" is often attributed to various people in different contexts, typically to express disbelief or criticism regarding how someone's ideas or legacy have been treated posthumously. One notable instance is when the phrase was used in reference to former President Abraham Lincoln, particularly in discussions about politics or social issues that contradict his principles. However, the exact origin of the phrase is not definitively linked to a single individual.
It was a custom to plant daisies over the grave of a loved one.
The phrase "someone walks over your grave" is simply a superstition. Shivering is a normal physiological response to feeling cold or experiencing fear, stress, or anxiety. It is not related to someone walking over your grave.
Aunt Grace mourned over her dead husband's grave. I mourn for our youth. is a popular phrase.
"Cover" derives from the Latin word with a similar meaning, "cooperire." The phrase "cover over" is a natural derivative of "cover," as it is a slightly more descriptive form of the verb.
Generally it means that if something is done contrary to which the deceased person would object to, their spirit would be disturbed.
It comes from ancient times when people used to bye plots for graves for family . It is said that walking over the grave meant a sign of disrespect as they were not yet dead so you wished them Ill.
I think it means the same as pull the wool over my eyes.
Murrow Turning Over in His Grave was created in 2003.
The Basilica of St. Peter was built over Peter's grave.