What is the meaning of “It goes something like this”?

When you’ve come across the phrase below,

you need to know what you’re craving for tacos. “And why would you eat a taco sandwich? I

checked vocab online but didn’t find a meaning for it.

How do you describe “it goes something like this”?

If every one behavior

has a surface level craving, there’s a deeper motive. A motivation is, therefore, important. The Full text is: Every behavior is, “Every behavior has a surface level craving, and the underlying motive is, so that every word is the exact same principle”. “I want to eat Taco taco. We have to get a good quality taco.” Is it healthy have tacos? Every week I’m motivated to eat tacos “because I have to eat lots of them to survive.” “But the truth is, somewhere deep down, I am motivated to eat tacos.” We’re not motivated by calories, but by the fact that tacos are very addictive! I’ve been craving a taco for a couple of years now and have decided to eat whatever I like. But in the end I need to consume more water and food. I must make sure to go to a good food and drink program every day.

Atomic habits by James Clear

(ed) by Carl Ek (ed/featuring George Lucas)

Asked on March 30, 2021 in Meaning.
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66 Answer(s)

We use the expression “it goes something like this” to introduce a short, vague or incomplete account or account of something, or a plan which is subject to modification. (Something like denotes a approximation, as J.R. notes below). Also, it is used to describe something.

Suppose you agree with me on my plan to rob a bank. I am making it doomed to rob this bank. Let me tell you what I did, because you have no experience with financial robbies. For instance, I travel inside the bank and you wait while you talk to the employees. I’ve been in a bank for 10 years. Is that true? I produce a gun and threaten the cashier, who hands me some money. I obstruct him from letting me get a gun he’s using. How are you going to drive away from me if I rush outside and step in the car?

If I asked someone on Sat. What tune did they sing? Person B: that’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” by Queen!

An anonymous Mexican writer is describing a situation in which he experiences a craving for tacos. This means that not all tacos are available or even available or that the reader must read the ingredients at the time of the writing, and does not be surprised if he doesn’t like tacos. I haven’t heard a voice calling, “I want to eat tacos!” But I don’t even hear it yelling in his head it is more urgent than his answer. And the introductory term makes that clear.

Does the verb “go” mean “I play along” or “Shout”? Where are you?

“Dosn’t it go something like this?” played Joan as she played the first couple of bars on her guitar. “Everytime I see it is like that. I feel all the anxiety out of it.”

Everyone reported that a lawyer was fired because he had got caught stealing company property but not before.

There is a ghostly ghost around the castle, or at least according to some stories.

Go (Cambridge Dictionary)

(English)

Answered on April 1, 2021.
Add Comment

We use the expression “it goes something like this” to introduce a short, vague or incomplete account or account of something, or a plan which is subject to modification. (Something like denotes a approximation, as J.R. notes below). Also, it is used to describe something.

Suppose you agree with me on my plan to rob a bank. I am making it doomed to rob this bank. Let me tell you what I did, because you have no experience with financial robbies. For instance, I travel inside the bank and you wait while you talk to the employees. I’ve been in a bank for 10 years. Is that true? I produce a gun and threaten the cashier, who hands me some money. I obstruct him from letting me get a gun he’s using. How are you going to drive away from me if I rush outside and step in the car?

If I asked someone on Sat. What tune did they sing? Person B: that’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” by Queen!

An anonymous Mexican writer is describing a situation in which he experiences a craving for tacos. This means that not all tacos are available or even available or that the reader must read the ingredients at the time of the writing, and does not be surprised if he doesn’t like tacos. I haven’t heard a voice calling, “I want to eat tacos!” But I don’t even hear it yelling in his head it is more urgent than his answer. And the introductory term makes that clear.

Does the verb “go” mean “I play along” or “Shout”? Where are you?

“Dosn’t it go something like this?” played Joan as she played the first couple of bars on her guitar. “Everytime I see it is like that. I feel all the anxiety out of it.”

Everyone reported that a lawyer was fired because he had got caught stealing company property but not before.

There is a ghostly ghost around the castle, or at least according to some stories.

Go (Cambridge Dictionary)

(English)

Answered on April 1, 2021.
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Where is a line that is the

only thing that can be used qualitatively: The house costs something

like forty thousand dollars?

What would mean

a house costing about forty thousand dollars.

When we use the word this we mean that what follows may not be exact. My patient went into a

rant and went something like this: Why don’t you give me medication? I wish I died suddenly. I want it now!

By using “something like this” I’m admitting that I may not be giving an exact quote or that I might not be impersonating her mannerisms or voice with 100% accuracy.

A craving like this comes

up on my mind when I “eat tacos”. ”

I would interpret that to mean that the craving is more of a feeling than actual words, but the person is trying to put that feeling into words. I think the person has never heard words in his craving, and when has he explained it by saying something like this. He said, “Halloween at length”.

I often have this

desire to eat tacos, but my stomach always tells me that its “I want to eat a taco.” You

would use the phrase when you wish you could say something more exact than you’re able to do. Why is it often used with music, as most of us can’t carry specific tune. We can’t.

Answered on April 3, 2021.
Add Comment

We use the expression “it goes something like this” to introduce a short, vague or incomplete account or account of something, or a plan which is subject to modification. (Something like denotes a approximation, as J.R. notes below). Also, it is used to describe something.

Suppose you agree with me on my plan to rob a bank. I am making it doomed to rob this bank. Let me tell you what I did, because you have no experience with financial robbies. For instance, I travel inside the bank and you wait while you talk to the employees. I’ve been in a bank for 10 years. Is that true? I produce a gun and threaten the cashier, who hands me some money. I obstruct him from letting me get a gun he’s using. How are you going to drive away from me if I rush outside and step in the car?

If I asked someone on Sat. What tune did they sing? Person B: that’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” by Queen!

An anonymous Mexican writer is describing a situation in which he experiences a craving for tacos. This means that not all tacos are available or even available or that the reader must read the ingredients at the time of the writing, and does not be surprised if he doesn’t like tacos. I haven’t heard a voice calling, “I want to eat tacos!” But I don’t even hear it yelling in his head it is more urgent than his answer. And the introductory term makes that clear.

Does the verb “go” mean “I play along” or “Shout”? Where are you?

“Dosn’t it go something like this?” played Joan as she played the first couple of bars on her guitar. “Everytime I see it is like that. I feel all the anxiety out of it.”

Everyone reported that a lawyer was fired because he had got caught stealing company property but not before.

There is a ghostly ghost around the castle, or at least according to some stories.

Go (Cambridge Dictionary)

(English)

Answered on April 6, 2021.
Add Comment

We use the expression “it goes something like this” to introduce a short, vague or incomplete account or account of something, or a plan which is subject to modification. (Something like denotes a approximation, as J.R. notes below). Also, it is used to describe something.

Suppose you agree with me on my plan to rob a bank. I am making it doomed to rob this bank. Let me tell you what I did, because you have no experience with financial robbies. For instance, I travel inside the bank and you wait while you talk to the employees. I’ve been in a bank for 10 years. Is that true? I produce a gun and threaten the cashier, who hands me some money. I obstruct him from letting me get a gun he’s using. How are you going to drive away from me if I rush outside and step in the car?

If I asked someone on Sat. What tune did they sing? Person B: that’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” by Queen!

An anonymous Mexican writer is describing a situation in which he experiences a craving for tacos. This means that not all tacos are available or even available or that the reader must read the ingredients at the time of the writing, and does not be surprised if he doesn’t like tacos. I haven’t heard a voice calling, “I want to eat tacos!” But I don’t even hear it yelling in his head it is more urgent than his answer. And the introductory term makes that clear.

Does the verb “go” mean “I play along” or “Shout”? Where are you?

“Dosn’t it go something like this?” played Joan as she played the first couple of bars on her guitar. “Everytime I see it is like that. I feel all the anxiety out of it.”

Everyone reported that a lawyer was fired because he had got caught stealing company property but not before.

There is a ghostly ghost around the castle, or at least according to some stories.

Go (Cambridge Dictionary)

(English)

Answered on April 7, 2021.
Add Comment

We use the expression “it goes something like this” to introduce a short, vague or incomplete account or account of something, or a plan which is subject to modification. (Something like denotes a approximation, as J.R. notes below). Also, it is used to describe something.

Suppose you agree with me on my plan to rob a bank. I am making it doomed to rob this bank. Let me tell you what I did, because you have no experience with financial robbies. For instance, I travel inside the bank and you wait while you talk to the employees. I’ve been in a bank for 10 years. Is that true? I produce a gun and threaten the cashier, who hands me some money. I obstruct him from letting me get a gun he’s using. How are you going to drive away from me if I rush outside and step in the car?

If I asked someone on Sat. What tune did they sing? Person B: that’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” by Queen!

An anonymous Mexican writer is describing a situation in which he experiences a craving for tacos. This means that not all tacos are available or even available or that the reader must read the ingredients at the time of the writing, and does not be surprised if he doesn’t like tacos. I haven’t heard a voice calling, “I want to eat tacos!” But I don’t even hear it yelling in his head it is more urgent than his answer. And the introductory term makes that clear.

Does the verb “go” mean “I play along” or “Shout”? Where are you?

“Dosn’t it go something like this?” played Joan as she played the first couple of bars on her guitar. “Everytime I see it is like that. I feel all the anxiety out of it.”

Everyone reported that a lawyer was fired because he had got caught stealing company property but not before.

There is a ghostly ghost around the castle, or at least according to some stories.

Go (Cambridge Dictionary)

(English)

Answered on April 9, 2021.
Add Comment

We use the expression “it goes something like this” to introduce a short, vague or incomplete account or account of something, or a plan which is subject to modification. (Something like denotes a approximation, as J.R. notes below). Also, it is used to describe something.

Suppose you agree with me on my plan to rob a bank. I am making it doomed to rob this bank. Let me tell you what I did, because you have no experience with financial robbies. For instance, I travel inside the bank and you wait while you talk to the employees. I’ve been in a bank for 10 years. Is that true? I produce a gun and threaten the cashier, who hands me some money. I obstruct him from letting me get a gun he’s using. How are you going to drive away from me if I rush outside and step in the car?

If I asked someone on Sat. What tune did they sing? Person B: that’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” by Queen!

An anonymous Mexican writer is describing a situation in which he experiences a craving for tacos. This means that not all tacos are available or even available or that the reader must read the ingredients at the time of the writing, and does not be surprised if he doesn’t like tacos. I haven’t heard a voice calling, “I want to eat tacos!” But I don’t even hear it yelling in his head it is more urgent than his answer. And the introductory term makes that clear.

Does the verb “go” mean “I play along” or “Shout”? Where are you?

“Dosn’t it go something like this?” played Joan as she played the first couple of bars on her guitar. “Everytime I see it is like that. I feel all the anxiety out of it.”

Everyone reported that a lawyer was fired because he had got caught stealing company property but not before.

There is a ghostly ghost around the castle, or at least according to some stories.

Go (Cambridge Dictionary)

(English)

Answered on April 9, 2021.
Add Comment

We use the expression “it goes something like this” to introduce a short, vague or incomplete account or account of something, or a plan which is subject to modification. (Something like denotes a approximation, as J.R. notes below). Also, it is used to describe something.

Suppose you agree with me on my plan to rob a bank. I am making it doomed to rob this bank. Let me tell you what I did, because you have no experience with financial robbies. For instance, I travel inside the bank and you wait while you talk to the employees. I’ve been in a bank for 10 years. Is that true? I produce a gun and threaten the cashier, who hands me some money. I obstruct him from letting me get a gun he’s using. How are you going to drive away from me if I rush outside and step in the car?

If I asked someone on Sat. What tune did they sing? Person B: that’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” by Queen!

An anonymous Mexican writer is describing a situation in which he experiences a craving for tacos. This means that not all tacos are available or even available or that the reader must read the ingredients at the time of the writing, and does not be surprised if he doesn’t like tacos. I haven’t heard a voice calling, “I want to eat tacos!” But I don’t even hear it yelling in his head it is more urgent than his answer. And the introductory term makes that clear.

Does the verb “go” mean “I play along” or “Shout”? Where are you?

“Dosn’t it go something like this?” played Joan as she played the first couple of bars on her guitar. “Everytime I see it is like that. I feel all the anxiety out of it.”

Everyone reported that a lawyer was fired because he had got caught stealing company property but not before.

There is a ghostly ghost around the castle, or at least according to some stories.

Go (Cambridge Dictionary)

(English)

Answered on April 10, 2021.
Add Comment

We use the expression “it goes something like this” to introduce a short, vague or incomplete account or account of something, or a plan which is subject to modification. (Something like denotes a approximation, as J.R. notes below). Also, it is used to describe something.

Suppose you agree with me on my plan to rob a bank. I am making it doomed to rob this bank. Let me tell you what I did, because you have no experience with financial robbies. For instance, I travel inside the bank and you wait while you talk to the employees. I’ve been in a bank for 10 years. Is that true? I produce a gun and threaten the cashier, who hands me some money. I obstruct him from letting me get a gun he’s using. How are you going to drive away from me if I rush outside and step in the car?

If I asked someone on Sat. What tune did they sing? Person B: that’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” by Queen!

An anonymous Mexican writer is describing a situation in which he experiences a craving for tacos. This means that not all tacos are available or even available or that the reader must read the ingredients at the time of the writing, and does not be surprised if he doesn’t like tacos. I haven’t heard a voice calling, “I want to eat tacos!” But I don’t even hear it yelling in his head it is more urgent than his answer. And the introductory term makes that clear.

Does the verb “go” mean “I play along” or “Shout”? Where are you?

“Dosn’t it go something like this?” played Joan as she played the first couple of bars on her guitar. “Everytime I see it is like that. I feel all the anxiety out of it.”

Everyone reported that a lawyer was fired because he had got caught stealing company property but not before.

There is a ghostly ghost around the castle, or at least according to some stories.

Go (Cambridge Dictionary)

(English)

Answered on April 12, 2021.
Add Comment

We use the expression “it goes something like this” to introduce a short, vague or incomplete account or account of something, or a plan which is subject to modification. (Something like denotes a approximation, as J.R. notes below). Also, it is used to describe something.

Suppose you agree with me on my plan to rob a bank. I am making it doomed to rob this bank. Let me tell you what I did, because you have no experience with financial robbies. For instance, I travel inside the bank and you wait while you talk to the employees. I’ve been in a bank for 10 years. Is that true? I produce a gun and threaten the cashier, who hands me some money. I obstruct him from letting me get a gun he’s using. How are you going to drive away from me if I rush outside and step in the car?

If I asked someone on Sat. What tune did they sing? Person B: that’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” by Queen!

An anonymous Mexican writer is describing a situation in which he experiences a craving for tacos. This means that not all tacos are available or even available or that the reader must read the ingredients at the time of the writing, and does not be surprised if he doesn’t like tacos. I haven’t heard a voice calling, “I want to eat tacos!” But I don’t even hear it yelling in his head it is more urgent than his answer. And the introductory term makes that clear.

Does the verb “go” mean “I play along” or “Shout”? Where are you?

“Dosn’t it go something like this?” played Joan as she played the first couple of bars on her guitar. “Everytime I see it is like that. I feel all the anxiety out of it.”

Everyone reported that a lawyer was fired because he had got caught stealing company property but not before.

There is a ghostly ghost around the castle, or at least according to some stories.

Go (Cambridge Dictionary)

(English)

Answered on April 16, 2021.
Add Comment

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