To commend an opinion to those who already accept it. "And he said unto them, Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized, shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned" (Mark 16:15-16). It comes from the notion of proselytizing. The idea being that you do not need to proselytize people from the choir because they are already love Jesus in their hearts so much that they sing his praise through song.
The saying is "Preaching to the choir."
My state of bliss was achieved by seeing the pastor preach to the choir.
speak simply
No. An idiom is a phrase whose meaning cannot be determined by context. A cliche is a stale quotation or phrase that has been overused.Example idiom: He was feeling under the weatheryesterday, but today he's fine.Example cliche: Think outside of the box.
SING
The cliche for not good with one's hands is "all thumbs". Example sentence: She tried to show me how to knit, but with the needles and yarn, I was all thumbs.
No, the word 'preach' is a verb, meaning to proclaim or put forth in a sermon; to advocate or to urge acceptance publicly.The noun forms of the verb to preach are preacher and the gerund, preaching.
Choir is people singing together. the general meaning of choir is doing things together, so generally they rehearse and warm up either as a whole or in their parts.
The spelling is cliche (French accented form cliché), meaning trite, outmoded, or stereotyped.
That would be cliché or cliche. klee-SHAY.
the opposite of non sequitur can be: cliche (if used for humorous purposes, since non sequitur is completely irrelevant, but a cliche means common and overused) or apropo or apt (meaning it is very relevant)
CLICHE. not clesha.. a cliche is a word or phrase that has been used so much, it has lost its meaning. examples are: LOL, OMG.. (and etc., most text words are worthless now..) got it??