After hours of struggling through the dense jungle, on what was turning out to be a fruitless search for the lost city, I rather began to suspect that I'd been sent on a wild goose chase.
He has a clever way of re-using old bicycles.
wild wildebeast wander
a wavey (wild goose) would be 'une oie sauvage' in French.
The homophone pair stayed and staid fits the sentence, "She stayed away from the wild party because she's a staid person."
It depends on the sentence structure. If "recently" is modifying the rest of the sentence, then use a comma. If it is modifying a specific verb, do not use a comma. Example 1: Recently, I discovered that I'm not as wild about blueberries as I used to be. Example 2: I recently discovered that I'm not as wild about blueberries as I used to be.
It is a idiom.
ana is a foolish person
Wycliffe's Wild Goose Chase was created in 1982.
The Wild Goose Chase - film - was created on 1915-05-27.
The Wild Goose Chase - 1915 was released on: USA: 27 May 1915
The Wild Goose Chase - 1932 was released on: USA: 12 August 1932
Go on a wild goose chase!
A "wild goose chase" is a figurative expression relating to the pursuit of something you likely cannot or did not realize. A fruitless pursuit of something that is unattainable
Dirty Jobs - 2005 Wild Goose Chase 3-17 was released on: USA: 28 August 2007 Australia: 16 July 2008
He has a clever way of re-using old bicycles.
He probably did not originate the term, as it must have started as a game, like a greased pig chase. Shakespeare did however use the phrase in Romeo and Juliet, which would have popularized it. Mercutio says: Nay, if thy wits run the wild-goose chase, I have done, for thou hast more of the wild-goose in one of thy wits than, I am sure, I have in my whole five: was I with you there for the goose?
Meowiarty is on the top of Big Ben in Marleybone. Before that, your on a wild goose chase trying to capture him when he escapes from Newgate Prison.