Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
dog 'íntok and čái- yaáte -k yell- stop - PFV 'á'a him nók-híkkaha-ki-i talk-hear- PPL - STAT ču'ú 'íntok čái- yaáte -k 'á'a nók-híkkaha-ki-i dog and yell- stop -PFV him talk-hear- PPL -STAT "the dog stopped barking when he heard him talking" In Timbisha, the cessative is formed with the suffix -mmahwan. For example: satü that püe just nangkawimmahwa talk- CESSATIVE satü ...
Do not put all your eggs in one basket; Do not put the cart before the horse; Do not put too many irons in the fire; Do not put new wine into old bottles; Do not put off until tomorrow what you can do today; Do not rock the boat; Do not shut/lock the stable door after the horse has bolted; Do not spend it all in one place
He continued, “You know, he said something, everybody trusted Harold, and so whenever things would happen and people would sort of scatter, Harold was the one that sort of got everybody back to ...
What's done cannot be undone. – To bed, to bed, to bed!" [3] Shakespeare did not coin the phrase; it may actually be a derivative of the early 14th-century French proverb: Mez quant ja est la chose fecte, ne peut pas bien estre desfecte, which is translated into English as "But when a thing is already done, it cannot be undone".
Image credits: LovePeaceHope-ish #6. A year out of law school, I once had a potential client who wanted me to sue Canada. Apparently, he could not get into the country due to his felony record.
Something that I set for myself as a goal this season is that I don't want to be known as somebody who makes the same room 40 different ways and is known as one-note. The spaces that I was ...
The little boy's mother was going off to the market. She worried about her son, who was always up to some mischief. She sternly admonished him, "Be good. Don't get into trouble. Don't eat all the chocolate. Don't spill all the milk. Don't throw stones at the cow. Don't fall down the well." The boy had done all of these things on previous market ...
I just made a decision to tell the story from start to finish because I feel like you’re going to tell the story, tell the whole story—the good, the bad and the embarrassing,” she explains ...