c. Selling or serving food prepared in accordance with dietary laws: a kosher restaurant. 2. Informal Legitimate; permissible: Is it kosher to wear jeans in the office? tr.v. ko·shered, ko·sher·ing, ko·shers To make proper or ritually pure.Idiom: keep kosher To observe Jewish ...
There will be no talk of business here on New Year's Eve. Everyone, eat, drink, and be merry!I encouraged Scott and the others to eat, drink, and be merry, but they're still sitting in the corner, looking all glum. See also:and,merry...
I believe horses were considered so close to family that humans would use the expression to highlight their desperation for food. It’d be like eating one of their own family members. ‒ Will April 23, 2021 Who invented the idiom “I can eat a horse.” ‒ Unknown January 22, 2021 ...
(Is that the right idiom?) No, by the skin of my teeth. Not sure where I got pants. Russ didn’t feel like he could spend a second week of the year as my arm candy. He has his own work to do. But he did nicely drive me to the airport this morning. Glad I got there ...
Besides, throwing stones at birds has never worked out well for you in the past; do you remember the time at the family picnic when that crow crapped on your hotdog, and you threw a stone at it. You missed the crow and hit your Aunt Petunia in the forehead. ...