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Phrases related to: know like a book

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know like a bookTo have an extensive and penetrating understanding of (something or someone).Rate it:

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i know you know i knowYou already know that this is not a new thing to meRate it:

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know every trick in the bookto know all there is to be known about a certain discipline.Rate it:

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if it quacks like a duck, waddles like a duck and looks like a duck, chances are it's a duckif something has all the attributes and appearances of being a certain thing, the probability exists that it is that thing.Rate it:

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read like a bookTo be able to discern someone's thoughts from his or her body language or other behavior.Rate it:

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better the devil you know than the devil you don't knowSomething bad and familiar is better than something bad and unknown.Rate it:

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better the devil you know than the one you don't knowAlternative form of better the devil you know than the devil you don't know.Rate it:

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it's not what you know but who you knowFor success, and especially to obtain employment, one's knowledge and skills are less useful and less important than one's network of personal contacts.1951, G. P. Bush and L. H. Hattery, "Federal Recruitment of Junior Engineers," Science, vol. 114, no. 2966, p. 456:Eighty-four students referred to political influence as a disadvantage of federal employment with such remarks as: "There are too many political connections necessary . . . it's not what you know but who you knowRate it:

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know what i'm saying - say what i knowUnderstanding information then teach to othersRate it:

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to know and not to do is not to knowWhen you say you know something yet you fail to act as if that knowledge were true, it shows you don't really know that something to be true; it essentially calls the person a hypocrite since they say one thing and do another; same as the phrase "Your actions speak so loudly that your words I cannot hear"Rate it:

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know like the back of one's handTo be intimately knowledgeable about something, especially a place.Rate it:

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I'd like to knowPolite requestRate it:

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like mother, like daughterA daughter will have traits similar to her mother upon reaching adulthood.Rate it:

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like father, like sonA son will have traits similar to his father upon reaching adulthood.Rate it:

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turn up for the bookA very unexpected, usually pleasant, surprise.Rate it:

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in one's bookUsed other than as an idiom: see in, one's, book.Rate it:

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tacit acceptance of the content of the book itselfTo be silentRate it:

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Throw the Book at SomeoneSevere punishment for breaking of certain rules or laws; highest level of penaltyRate it:

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By the BookAs per requirements, exactly up to marksRate it:

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have more chins than a Chinese phone bookTo be exceedingly fat, especially under the chin (as in a "double chin").Rate it:

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aces in my booksomeone who meets or exceeds my approval or expectationsRate it:

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be an open bookOne's life and times can be an open book by simply sharing, answering queries, being forthright, carrying no baggage or disagreements.Rate it:

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blot one's copy bookTo damage one's own reputation through bad behavior.Rate it:

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blue bookA book of statistics or almanac, usually published by an agency or as a trade publication.Rate it:

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blue bookUsed other than as an idiom: see blue, book.Rate it:

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book dumpingThe discarding of quantities of books.Rate it:

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book dumpingThe practice of donating old used books that burden rather than assist communities.Rate it:

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book inregisterRate it:

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book upTo reserve or book all of something, for example by purchasing all the tickets.Rate it:

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by the bookIn a manner which adheres strictly to rules, legal requirements, or official procedures.Rate it:

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by-the-bookAdhering strictly to rules, legal requirements, or official procedures.Rate it:

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closed bookA person or thing that cannot be easily understood; someone or something incomprehensible or puzzling.Rate it:

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crack a bookTo open up one's books, especially in order to study.Rate it:

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in one's bookIn one's opinion.Rate it:

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make bookTo gamble, either by placing or taking bets.Rate it:

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make bookTo be very confident.Rate it:

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open bookAn open book decomposition.Rate it:

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open bookAn inside angle in the rock.Rate it:

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open bookA person who through naivete responds candidly to questions or openly displays their emotions or intentions.Rate it:

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open bookSomething of which salient aspects are obvious or easily interpreted.Rate it:

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take a leaf out of someone's bookTo adopt an idea or practice of another person.Rate it:

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throw the book atTo apply the harshest possible punishment to.Rate it:

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to be an open bookAn individual's life can be unrestricted in intimate details and become as an open book.Rate it:

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you can't judge a book by its coverIt is not possible to make reliable judgments about things or people by considering external appearances alone.Rate it:

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you can't tell a book by its coverAlternative form of you can't judge a book by its cover.Rate it:

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if you know what I meanUsed to allude to something unsaid or hinted at.Rate it:

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know someone from AdamTo know or recognise someone at all.Rate it:

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you know whatA phrase used to get someone's attention before announcing something.Rate it:

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that's for me to know and you to find outA phrase used to reply to a question whose answer the speaker doesn't want to reveal.Rate it:

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know someone from a can of paintSynonym of know someone from AdamRate it:

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