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Asked on December 24, 2021 in Meaning.
Speaking as an Englishman living outside of London, the use of the term “jam it down their throat” is perfectly fine; “ram it down their throat” or “stuff it down their throat” is used interchangeably.
If someone smacked their throat it was local, I don’t know where the words came from. Cram it down their throat. “Cram it into their mouths” yes if talking about someone eating with gusto. I think that cram is more one performing the action himself.
What does the meaning mean? If it is possible to force feed someone something what can I force feed him on if he cannot eat anything but crumbs and what should an animal must eat? It could be information, opinion, viewpoint, or rhetoric. I know people don’t enjoy the experience most. When they get close to the object, they just want to feel very, very big. Quite often one will apologise when using the phrase about themselves “Sorry if it feels like I am shoving this down your throat…” Oh. Yes. How do
you start Shoving?
- 245397 views
- 9 answers
- 89923 votes
-
Asked on December 24, 2021 in Meaning.
Speaking as an Englishman living outside of London, the use of the term “jam it down their throat” is perfectly fine; “ram it down their throat” or “stuff it down their throat” is used interchangeably.
If someone smacked their throat it was local, I don’t know where the words came from. Cram it down their throat. “Cram it into their mouths” yes if talking about someone eating with gusto. I think that cram is more one performing the action himself.
What does the meaning mean? If it is possible to force feed someone something what can I force feed him on if he cannot eat anything but crumbs and what should an animal must eat? It could be information, opinion, viewpoint, or rhetoric. I know people don’t enjoy the experience most. When they get close to the object, they just want to feel very, very big. Quite often one will apologise when using the phrase about themselves “Sorry if it feels like I am shoving this down your throat…” Oh. Yes. How do
you start Shoving?
- 245397 views
- 9 answers
- 89923 votes
-
Asked on December 24, 2021 in Meaning.
Speaking as an Englishman living outside of London, the use of the term “jam it down their throat” is perfectly fine; “ram it down their throat” or “stuff it down their throat” is used interchangeably.
If someone smacked their throat it was local, I don’t know where the words came from. Cram it down their throat. “Cram it into their mouths” yes if talking about someone eating with gusto. I think that cram is more one performing the action himself.
What does the meaning mean? If it is possible to force feed someone something what can I force feed him on if he cannot eat anything but crumbs and what should an animal must eat? It could be information, opinion, viewpoint, or rhetoric. I know people don’t enjoy the experience most. When they get close to the object, they just want to feel very, very big. Quite often one will apologise when using the phrase about themselves “Sorry if it feels like I am shoving this down your throat…” Oh. Yes. How do
you start Shoving?
- 245397 views
- 9 answers
- 89923 votes
-
Asked on December 24, 2021 in Meaning.
Speaking as an Englishman living outside of London, the use of the term “jam it down their throat” is perfectly fine; “ram it down their throat” or “stuff it down their throat” is used interchangeably.
If someone smacked their throat it was local, I don’t know where the words came from. Cram it down their throat. “Cram it into their mouths” yes if talking about someone eating with gusto. I think that cram is more one performing the action himself.
What does the meaning mean? If it is possible to force feed someone something what can I force feed him on if he cannot eat anything but crumbs and what should an animal must eat? It could be information, opinion, viewpoint, or rhetoric. I know people don’t enjoy the experience most. When they get close to the object, they just want to feel very, very big. Quite often one will apologise when using the phrase about themselves “Sorry if it feels like I am shoving this down your throat…” Oh. Yes. How do
you start Shoving?
- 245397 views
- 9 answers
- 89923 votes
-
Asked on December 24, 2021 in Meaning.
Speaking as an Englishman living outside of London, the use of the term “jam it down their throat” is perfectly fine; “ram it down their throat” or “stuff it down their throat” is used interchangeably.
If someone smacked their throat it was local, I don’t know where the words came from. Cram it down their throat. “Cram it into their mouths” yes if talking about someone eating with gusto. I think that cram is more one performing the action himself.
What does the meaning mean? If it is possible to force feed someone something what can I force feed him on if he cannot eat anything but crumbs and what should an animal must eat? It could be information, opinion, viewpoint, or rhetoric. I know people don’t enjoy the experience most. When they get close to the object, they just want to feel very, very big. Quite often one will apologise when using the phrase about themselves “Sorry if it feels like I am shoving this down your throat…” Oh. Yes. How do
you start Shoving?
- 245397 views
- 9 answers
- 89923 votes