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The seller has offered us the house for $250,000; the ball is in our court. What should we do?
You ask the boss, she loves you. Reply: No way. I fell from grace with her a long time ago.
Do you know John Roberts? Reply: Well, I know him. But we are not on a first name basis.
Spending a week in the psychiatric hospital was a bitter pill to swallow, but Jake really needed to do it.
I can't stop the water from coming out. Reply: Turn that switch over there, and that will do the job.
Every time that baby cries, they just run around and give him whatever he wants. Reply: The squeaky wheel gets the oil.
Every time that baby cries, they just run around and give him whatever he wants. Reply: The squeeky wheel gets the oil.
That new manager threatened to fire me again, but I know he won't do it. He's all bark and no bite.
I want to stay up. I am not tired. Reply: Do as you are told and go to bed right now.
To play at that level, you are going to have to practice all of the time, you know. Reply: No pain, no gain.
Do you think that Bill is going to offer you a promotion this month? Reply: I won't count my chickens until they have hatched.
You do like that girl, don't you? Answer: No! I don't! Not at all! Why do you think so? Reply: You protest too much. #Protest too much comes from Hamlet by William Shakespeare; the Queen speaking: The lady doth protest too much, methinks. (Note: people do not usually use the word methinks when they are speaking English today.) To protest too much is to insist so passionately about something not being true that people suspect the opposite of what you are saying.