The phrase "eaten you out of house and home" is from William Shakespeare's play "Henry IV, Part 2." It is used to describe someone who has consumed all the resources or provisions of a household, typically in a humorous or exaggerated context. This expression captures the themes of excess and the burdens of hospitality present in the play.
Nobody. Julius Caesar says it in a play by Menander
Iago.
EMILIA
Juliet said it to Romeo in the balcony scene
shylock
Henry V. Henry V.
Henry the 6TH
In scientific terms, something that is eaten can be said to have been ingested.
If a cricket is in your house and is chirping constantly without pause, it is said that a pregnancy is soon to come. If a cricket is in the house and pauses in the chirping it is said that you will come into some money. If a cricket is in your home, it is bad luck to kill it. If a cricket comes into your home and it is silent, it means death is impending.
I do not remember these words, but it was said of Jesus, after he had driven the money changers from the temple: The zeal of thine house hath eaten me up. (John 2.17)
It was never said in the book but maybe she was?
The quote, "Thou who troubleth his own house shall inherit the wind," is said twice in the book/play, Inherit the Wind. Many other bible verses are recited in the play, though.
In Swahili, "Welcome to my house" is said as "Karibu nyumbani kwangu." The word "karibu" means "welcome," while "nyumbani" translates to "house" or "home," and "kwangu" means "my." This phrase is commonly used to invite guests into one's home.
No, in an interview he said he's been faking drums for three years on Cory in the House and he doesn't really know how to play.
Well its been said that Miranda Cosgrove will come on the show and play a character names Anna
It is said Scylla ate thousands of men as they passed by or tried to fight her. In particular, 6 of Odysseus' men were eaten as they came home from the Siege of Troy.
Vomit.