3
Points
Questions
1
Answers
63
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Asked on October 8, 2021 in Meaning.
How did you confuse two related idioms?
Meat is the substantive portion of anything:
We talk about the meat of the issue.
Red meat, demagoguery, intended to rile up your own audience: “I
didn’t build that.” Red meat, “I didn’t build that.”
Red meat that isn’t intended to be recognized by your opponents is a dog whistle. Your adversaries will accuse you of using codewords, when actually, of course, what you’re saying is the truth and you are speaking truth to power.
What are some examples of American politics?
- 357163 views
- 89 answers
- 131975 votes
-
Asked on October 7, 2021 in Meaning.
How did you confuse two related idioms?
Meat is the substantive portion of anything:
We talk about the meat of the issue.
Red meat, demagoguery, intended to rile up your own audience: “I
didn’t build that.” Red meat, “I didn’t build that.”
Red meat that isn’t intended to be recognized by your opponents is a dog whistle. Your adversaries will accuse you of using codewords, when actually, of course, what you’re saying is the truth and you are speaking truth to power.
What are some examples of American politics?
- 357163 views
- 89 answers
- 131975 votes
-
Asked on October 6, 2021 in Meaning.
How did you confuse two related idioms?
Meat is the substantive portion of anything:
We talk about the meat of the issue.
Red meat, demagoguery, intended to rile up your own audience: “I
didn’t build that.” Red meat, “I didn’t build that.”
Red meat that isn’t intended to be recognized by your opponents is a dog whistle. Your adversaries will accuse you of using codewords, when actually, of course, what you’re saying is the truth and you are speaking truth to power.
What are some examples of American politics?
- 357163 views
- 89 answers
- 131975 votes
-
Asked on October 5, 2021 in Meaning.
How did you confuse two related idioms?
Meat is the substantive portion of anything:
We talk about the meat of the issue.
Red meat, demagoguery, intended to rile up your own audience: “I
didn’t build that.” Red meat, “I didn’t build that.”
Red meat that isn’t intended to be recognized by your opponents is a dog whistle. Your adversaries will accuse you of using codewords, when actually, of course, what you’re saying is the truth and you are speaking truth to power.
What are some examples of American politics?
- 357163 views
- 89 answers
- 131975 votes
-
Asked on October 1, 2021 in Meaning.
How did you confuse two related idioms?
Meat is the substantive portion of anything:
We talk about the meat of the issue.
Red meat, demagoguery, intended to rile up your own audience: “I
didn’t build that.” Red meat, “I didn’t build that.”
Red meat that isn’t intended to be recognized by your opponents is a dog whistle. Your adversaries will accuse you of using codewords, when actually, of course, what you’re saying is the truth and you are speaking truth to power.
What are some examples of American politics?
- 357163 views
- 89 answers
- 131975 votes
-
Asked on May 27, 2021 in Phrases.
Is it much luckier to be Lucky than lucky to be Smart? Is that a song from the Pippin musical played
in opera?
- 577889 views
- 199 answers
- 212732 votes
-
Asked on May 27, 2021 in Phrases.
Is it much luckier to be Lucky than lucky to be Smart? Is that a song from the Pippin musical played
in opera?
- 577889 views
- 199 answers
- 212732 votes
-
Asked on May 27, 2021 in Phrases.
Is it much luckier to be Lucky than lucky to be Smart? Is that a song from the Pippin musical played
in opera?
- 577889 views
- 199 answers
- 212732 votes
-
Asked on May 27, 2021 in Phrases.
Is it much luckier to be Lucky than lucky to be Smart? Is that a song from the Pippin musical played
in opera?
- 577889 views
- 199 answers
- 212732 votes
-
Asked on May 27, 2021 in Phrases.
Is it much luckier to be Lucky than lucky to be Smart? Is that a song from the Pippin musical played
in opera?
- 577889 views
- 199 answers
- 212732 votes