In northern Kentucky there used to a famous pie eating contest. One year the current champion Billy-bob ate ove 30 apple pies. About halfway through someone watching from the audience reportedly yelled "his mouth is like a pie hole." Now Billy was kind of annoying and talked way to much so from that day on people would tell him to shut his pie hole and that's how it started.
It means "be quiet"
josh and rob and zach are cool dudes... or are they????? this looks like a job for mr. unintended... siihut shut your pie hole... 7yx=c aDEWQ
participle phrase
Yap, trap, face, mug, pie hole Cake hole, gob , puss.
The noun 'pie' is not a complement.In the given sentence, the noun 'pie' is the direct object of the verb 'baked'.The complete direct object is the noun phrase 'a fresh apple pie'.A complement can be a subject complement or an object complement.A subject complement is a noun or an adjective that follows a linking verb and restates the subject of the sentence, for example:"Dessert was a fresh apple pie." (dessert = pie, a noun)The fresh apple pie was delicious. (pie = delicious, an adjective)An object complement is a noun that follows a direct object and restates it, for example:Susan served dessert, a fresh apple pie. (the noun 'pie' restates the direct object 'dessert' / dessert = pie)
It means "be quiet"
It means shut your mouth or shut up or silence.
nobody of course... SHUT YOUR PIE HOLE
The character Tony Soprano from the TV show "The Sopranos" was famous for saying "shut your pie-hole." The line became a memorable catchphrase associated with the character's tough and direct personality.
It means to be quiet or mine your own business or shut your pie-hole.
i seid shut your fucing pie hole
people is not fishing them as much.
LOL - the pie hole is the 'enter' door and the corn hole is the 'exit' door. Best way I know how to explain it.
The phrase "easy as pie" means that something is very simple or effortless to do, just like eating a delicious pie.
3.14159.......
simileThe phrase "as American as apple pie" is an example of both a simile and an expression.
The Pie Hole