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Phrases related to: Appendix:Snowclones/I'm here to X A and Y B, and I'm all out of A Page #8

Yee yee! We've found 5,827 phrases and idioms matching Appendix:Snowclones/I'm here to X A and Y B, and I'm all out of A.

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some people have all the luckSuggests that someone is enjoying more success than they deserve.Rate it:

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someone's elevator doesn't go all the way to the topUsed as an indirect way to say that someone is crazy.Rate it:

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someone's elevator doesn't go all the way to the topUsed as an indirect way to say that someone is mentally deficient.Rate it:

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tell allTo reveal everything, particularly information that is normally withheld.Rate it:

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tell allTo tell everyone.Rate it:

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tenere all'oscurokeep someone in the darkRate it:

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that's allThat is all I want to say. There is no more to it.Rate it:

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that's all she wroteIndicating an abrupt termination of a project, or of one's hopes or plans.Rate it:

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the conference was attended by people from all walks of lifeit means the conference was attended by people from different parts of the worldRate it:

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tick all the boxesTo fulfill all the requirements, especially as itemized in a list; to have all the needed characteristics; to complete all the steps in a process in an orderly manner.Rate it:

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time heals all woundsNegative feelings eventually erode awayRate it:

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today we are allMarch 11, 2004: Denis MacShane, Guardian Unlimited.Rate it:

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today we are allAn expression indicating that the speaker empathizes with members of an identifiable group that was the subject of a disaster, and projects that others empathize as well.Rate it:

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today we are allSeptember 12, 2001: Jean-Marie Colombani, "Today, We Are All Americans", Le Monde.Rate it:

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top it all offTo emphasize or underscore; to make something even better or worse.Rate it:

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walk all overTo dominate a person or a group; to have a person take a submissive or inferior role.Rate it:

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walk all overUsed other than as an idiom: see walk, all, over.Rate it:

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we haven't got all daya statement used to hurry people upRate it:

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who ate all the piesAn interjection used pejoratively against a fat personRate it:

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with all due respectA phrase used before disagreeing with someone, usually considered polite.Rate it:

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written all over someone's faceVery obvious, from someone's facial expression.Rate it:

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you allPlural form of you or singular formal form of you.Rate it:

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you allAlternative form of all of you. Plural form of you, including everyone being addressed.Rate it:

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you're all rightused to politely reject an offerRate it:

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out of sight, out of mindWhen something is not nearby, it is forgotten about.Rate it:

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rock out with one's cock outTo enjoy oneself immensely, to partyRate it:

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Out of Sight, Out of MindYou forget people that are no longer visible, if you don’t see someone for a while, you tend to forgetRate it:

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shine out or shines outsomething shines out if is or has a quality that seems impressive or is very noticeable (but not excessive or negative as in glaring)Rate it:

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in and outsexual intercourse, especially a brief one.Rate it:

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In One Ear and Out the OtherNot to pay any serious attention to something, ignore something without turning any ear to itRate 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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out of house and homeHelping Your Dog Adjust to a New Home, The Progressive Animal Welfare Society.Rate it:

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out of house and homeGlobal Checkup: How Healthy is Earth?, Science NOW.Rate it:

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Eat You Out of House and HomeTo eat and spend everything that other person has in his houseRate it:

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out of the mouths of babes and sucklingsAlternative form of out of the mouths of babes.Rate it:

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be in and outTo enter somewhere, and then quickly leave.Rate it:

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chew the meat and spit out the bonesTo take in a great deal of information and selectively disregard some of it as invalid or inapplicableRate it:

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down and outIn trouble; in a bad time or situation or having very bad luck.Rate it:

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drill in and drill outTo work on something for a small time, before ultimately giving up.Rate it:

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eat someone out of house and homeC. 1598, William Shakespeare, Henry IV, Part 2, Act II Scene I.Rate it:

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eat someone out of house and homeTo consume such a portion of one's store of food that little is left for the owner.Rate it:

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go in one ear and out the otherFailed to pay attention.Rate it:

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know inside and outTo know {something or someone) very thoroughly.Rate it:

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know something inside and outTo know something very thoroughly.Rate it:

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one strike and you're outIf you fail you will be given no second chance.Rate it:

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out and aboutTraveling; out; moving; engaged in regular day to day activities.Rate it:

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out of house and homeGail White, Partying with the Intelligentsia.Rate it:

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out of house and homeCassandra Chrones Moore, Haunted Housing: How Toxic Scare Stories Are Spooking the Public Out of House and Home.Rate it:

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out of house and homeIn a manner that deprives one of dwelling or some aspect thereof.Rate it:

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over and outUsed to signal the end of a conversation, especially one conducted by CB radio or the like.Rate it:

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