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What Exactly Does This Phrase Mean

What exactly does the phrase "go with what you know" mean?

it's a conservative approach to getting things done.

minimize your risk- use experience to your advantage.

What exactly does the phrase "wag the dog" mean?

It is taken from the joke: "Why does a dog wag its tail? Because a dog is smarter than its tail. If the tail was smarter, the tail would wag the dog." Interpretations differ as to the meaning of this metaphor. Some suggest the dog is public opinion, and the tail represents the media; the dog is the media, and the tail is political campaigns; or the dog is the people, and the tail is the government.

Moreover, the expression "the tail wagging the dog" refers to any case where something of greater significance is driven by something lesser.

What exactly does the phrase "suck it" mean?

Basically, to put in polite terms, it means to go away. Like if a mom asked her son to clean his room and he said "suck it", he wants her stop being annoying and go away.

Usually only guys say "suck it" because... well see, the "it" is something that a female generally would not have... I'll leave it at that

Other phrases would be : Get away from me Now!!! or, less politely, "F**k off"

What exactly does the phrase "lo and behold" mean?

In colloquial English, it means “Hey, look at this!” or something similar.The lo part is an expression of surprise, or a way of drawing someone’s attention. Behold means to look at something, or to observe it.

What does "drops mic" mean exactly? How did the phrase come into use?

*Drops mic* is a reference to a comedian or rapper dropping his mic at the end a particularly spectacular performance. It now signifies that someone has done something "cool", such as delivered a snappy comeback or told a funny joke.

What does the phrase 'a relative term' mean exactly?

That phrase is used to refer to something whose meaning changes with respect to things. For instance, speed is a relative term. Say you're walking down the road with a speed of 5 m/s and another person is walking beside you also with the speed 5 m/s. So with respect to the ground beneath you, you're in motion, but with respect to the person beside you, you're not moving at all.

What exactly does the phrase "I'm an open book" mean?

I've always thought it meant that you're ready to talk about yourself, thoughts, feelings, etc... like you're open to "being read." But someone else told me that they thought it meant that you're open to new things or being changed, like you're open to "being written." What exactly does the phrase mean?

What exactly does the phrase "win over yourself" mean?

” Win Over Yourself “

In the phrase "ohairi kudasai", what exactly does ohairi mean?

My lessons tell me it means "Please come in", with douzo added in front for extra politeness. I looked up the word ohairi in my dictionary, but I get nothing. Is there a different form for this word, or is maybe the "o" just polite, like in osake?

For anyone who'd like to know, this is the dictionary I'm using:

http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~jwb/cgi-bin/wwwjdic.cgi?1C

You have to check the box next to the search feature to get the word.

Also, what does "nasai" mean?

Memes: What exactly does the phrase "DickHead" mean?

Use Urbandictionary for such questions.Look at these:dickheadDickhead

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