Korvanica wrote: » "Thanks Captain Obvious" sarcastic remark aimed at a person who just said something that was already understood by everyone. Ever.
neil_hosey wrote: » dont look a gift horse in the mouth.. some one please explain
summerskin wrote: » you can tell a horse's age by it's teeth, so if you are given one as a gift, don't look at it's teeth in case it lessens the value of the gift horse in your mind.
Cliona99 wrote: » This is a bit of a guess... You tell the age of a horse by its teeth, so if someone gives you a horse as a present, don't try to figure out how old it is, or how much it might be worth. Don't nitpick presents, basically. Edit: missed the boat
fishy fishy wrote: » going forward We've turned a corner. strikes rage into the 99 percent of Irish adults.
fishy fishy wrote: » a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush. Take whatever meaning you want from that. :pac::pac:
stmol32 wrote: » Everyone is wrong it's actually from the Trojan horse story. If you want to check if there's loads of Greeks hiding inside the don't look in the mouth end because there will be a fella waiting with a spear for your eyeball. You're supposed to look underneath for the trapdoor.
BillJ wrote: » "Taking the high road" A term coined by hippies back in the 60's where they would smoke many many marijuana cigarettes before embarking on a journey
deccurley wrote: » What the hell does the "Driving Miss Daisy" reference mean?
summerskin wrote: » The Whole Nine Yards Not an American sports reference as many believe, but a reference to the "belt" of ammunition used by airforce gunners in WW2, which were nine yards long. Giving them "the whole nine yards" meant basically trying to blast the enemy to smithereens.