Friday, December 13, 2013

Half your cake and eat it two

I dedicate this exercise in amalgamated idiomatic phrases to Becky, without whose influence this would have been more difficult, but under whose tutelage it was a piece of pie:

  • A stitch in time saves the silver lining.
  • You can burn that bridge when you get there.
  • Shoot from the laurels and rest on your cuffs.
  • I heard it straight from the gift horse's mouth.
  • The grass is always greener before the dawn, and darkest on the other side.
  • It's easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle in a haystack than find the last straw that broke its back.
  • Beer before liquor, sailors take warning. Liquor before beer, sailors delight.
  • A bird in the hand is worth two in the frying pan.
  • Have your cake and eat it like everyone else: one leg at a time.
  • Hind sight is 50/50*

*Thanks for reminding me of this one, Julie! :D

4 comments:

Rachel Dull said...

The day I posted this, Becky came out of a meeting and said, "I just told them we have to get our feet dirty!"

Unknown said...

Don't forget your old line, "hindsight is 50/50"!

Rachel Dull said...

Thanks for the reminder, Julie! I love that one. Added it!

Rachel Dull said...

Becky: "Like flies to ointment..."