JeffSahol's Profile

2
Points

Questions
1

Answers
109

  • Asked on April 30, 2021 in Phrases.

    The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.

    • 633247 views
    • 29 answers
    • 234139 votes
  • Asked on April 30, 2021 in Phrases.

    The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.

    • 633247 views
    • 29 answers
    • 234139 votes
  • Asked on April 30, 2021 in Phrases.

    The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.

    • 633247 views
    • 29 answers
    • 234139 votes
  • Asked on April 29, 2021 in Phrases.

    The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.

    • 633247 views
    • 29 answers
    • 234139 votes
  • Asked on April 29, 2021 in Phrases.

    The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.

    • 633247 views
    • 29 answers
    • 234139 votes
  • Asked on April 28, 2021 in Phrases.

    The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.

    • 633247 views
    • 29 answers
    • 234139 votes
  • Asked on April 28, 2021 in Phrases.

    The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.

    • 633247 views
    • 29 answers
    • 234139 votes
  • Asked on April 27, 2021 in Phrases.

    The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.

    • 633247 views
    • 29 answers
    • 234139 votes
  • Asked on April 27, 2021 in Phrases.

    The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.

    • 633247 views
    • 29 answers
    • 234139 votes
  • Asked on April 27, 2021 in Phrases.

    The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.

    • 633247 views
    • 29 answers
    • 234139 votes