redemancy
Not one whose meaning comes to mind.
The idiom is "it depends on whose ox is being gored." The meaning is that we are more likely to take offense to a dubious comment or action when that comment or action is directed against what we see as our own interests. For example, we might think that it is inappropriate to call the president of the United States a 'pig-faced liar,' if we support that president. If the same comment is directed at a president we don't support, we are more likely to overlook it or even defend it.
a hand whose fingers r clenched in a palm
The lovers' love is rooted in the senses.
One whose wealth gives him power or influence; one of the plutocracy.
Jackson 5
what is the meaning of "whose stern impassioned stress" in the poem AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL
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"Him whose soul is white"
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Decipher.
This is not an idiom. It is an expression whose meaning may be deduced from its component parts, unlike an idiom, whose meaning cannot be deduced from its component parts. It means having extremely limited options while being forced to act, like a person who is cornered in a fight.
Danckmar Adler
Sir Francis Drake
Jonathan Edwards
whose is the word used for enquiring who something belongs to. eg. whose jacket is this? IMPORTANT. not to be confused with who's. eg. who's that? (who is that)
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