6
Points
Questions
3
Answers
66
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Asked on September 13, 2021 in Meaning.
What is an idiom?
- This
word from Charlie from this clip said “Alan, he was happy to see his
friends. ” “Alan: he was happy to see his friends. Is being away from you just like gravy? If the benefit
is financial, you could also use… windfall an amount
of
money that somebody wins or receives unexpectedly (ODO) EDIT: My “unintended”
part. Like @Tim and @Tim said, this can also be used metaphorically to refer to gains other than financial, but it doesn’t quite convey the ‘unintended’ part.
Whether you are looking for an idiom, rather than a single word,
consider: pennies from heaven, a stroke of luck
But again, these don’t quite cover the ‘unintended result of your own action’.
- 397292 views
- 249 answers
- 146150 votes
-
Asked on September 13, 2021 in Meaning.
What is an idiom?
- This
word from Charlie from this clip said “Alan, he was happy to see his
friends. ” “Alan: he was happy to see his friends. Is being away from you just like gravy? If the benefit
is financial, you could also use… windfall an amount
of
money that somebody wins or receives unexpectedly (ODO) EDIT: My “unintended”
part. Like @Tim and @Tim said, this can also be used metaphorically to refer to gains other than financial, but it doesn’t quite convey the ‘unintended’ part.
Whether you are looking for an idiom, rather than a single word,
consider: pennies from heaven, a stroke of luck
But again, these don’t quite cover the ‘unintended result of your own action’.
- 397292 views
- 249 answers
- 146150 votes
-
Asked on September 13, 2021 in Meaning.
What is an idiom?
- This
word from Charlie from this clip said “Alan, he was happy to see his
friends. ” “Alan: he was happy to see his friends. Is being away from you just like gravy? If the benefit
is financial, you could also use… windfall an amount
of
money that somebody wins or receives unexpectedly (ODO) EDIT: My “unintended”
part. Like @Tim and @Tim said, this can also be used metaphorically to refer to gains other than financial, but it doesn’t quite convey the ‘unintended’ part.
Whether you are looking for an idiom, rather than a single word,
consider: pennies from heaven, a stroke of luck
But again, these don’t quite cover the ‘unintended result of your own action’.
- 397292 views
- 249 answers
- 146150 votes
-
Asked on September 13, 2021 in Meaning.
What is an idiom?
- This
word from Charlie from this clip said “Alan, he was happy to see his
friends. ” “Alan: he was happy to see his friends. Is being away from you just like gravy? If the benefit
is financial, you could also use… windfall an amount
of
money that somebody wins or receives unexpectedly (ODO) EDIT: My “unintended”
part. Like @Tim and @Tim said, this can also be used metaphorically to refer to gains other than financial, but it doesn’t quite convey the ‘unintended’ part.
Whether you are looking for an idiom, rather than a single word,
consider: pennies from heaven, a stroke of luck
But again, these don’t quite cover the ‘unintended result of your own action’.
- 397292 views
- 249 answers
- 146150 votes
-
Asked on September 12, 2021 in Meaning.
What is an idiom?
- This
word from Charlie from this clip said “Alan, he was happy to see his
friends. ” “Alan: he was happy to see his friends. Is being away from you just like gravy? If the benefit
is financial, you could also use… windfall an amount
of
money that somebody wins or receives unexpectedly (ODO) EDIT: My “unintended”
part. Like @Tim and @Tim said, this can also be used metaphorically to refer to gains other than financial, but it doesn’t quite convey the ‘unintended’ part.
Whether you are looking for an idiom, rather than a single word,
consider: pennies from heaven, a stroke of luck
But again, these don’t quite cover the ‘unintended result of your own action’.
- 397292 views
- 249 answers
- 146150 votes
-
Asked on September 12, 2021 in Meaning.
What is an idiom?
- This
word from Charlie from this clip said “Alan, he was happy to see his
friends. ” “Alan: he was happy to see his friends. Is being away from you just like gravy? If the benefit
is financial, you could also use… windfall an amount
of
money that somebody wins or receives unexpectedly (ODO) EDIT: My “unintended”
part. Like @Tim and @Tim said, this can also be used metaphorically to refer to gains other than financial, but it doesn’t quite convey the ‘unintended’ part.
Whether you are looking for an idiom, rather than a single word,
consider: pennies from heaven, a stroke of luck
But again, these don’t quite cover the ‘unintended result of your own action’.
- 397292 views
- 249 answers
- 146150 votes
-
Asked on September 12, 2021 in Meaning.
What is an idiom?
- This
word from Charlie from this clip said “Alan, he was happy to see his
friends. ” “Alan: he was happy to see his friends. Is being away from you just like gravy? If the benefit
is financial, you could also use… windfall an amount
of
money that somebody wins or receives unexpectedly (ODO) EDIT: My “unintended”
part. Like @Tim and @Tim said, this can also be used metaphorically to refer to gains other than financial, but it doesn’t quite convey the ‘unintended’ part.
Whether you are looking for an idiom, rather than a single word,
consider: pennies from heaven, a stroke of luck
But again, these don’t quite cover the ‘unintended result of your own action’.
- 397292 views
- 249 answers
- 146150 votes
-
Asked on September 12, 2021 in Meaning.
What is an idiom?
- This
word from Charlie from this clip said “Alan, he was happy to see his
friends. ” “Alan: he was happy to see his friends. Is being away from you just like gravy? If the benefit
is financial, you could also use… windfall an amount
of
money that somebody wins or receives unexpectedly (ODO) EDIT: My “unintended”
part. Like @Tim and @Tim said, this can also be used metaphorically to refer to gains other than financial, but it doesn’t quite convey the ‘unintended’ part.
Whether you are looking for an idiom, rather than a single word,
consider: pennies from heaven, a stroke of luck
But again, these don’t quite cover the ‘unintended result of your own action’.
- 397292 views
- 249 answers
- 146150 votes
-
Asked on September 11, 2021 in Meaning.
What is an idiom?
- This
word from Charlie from this clip said “Alan, he was happy to see his
friends. ” “Alan: he was happy to see his friends. Is being away from you just like gravy? If the benefit
is financial, you could also use… windfall an amount
of
money that somebody wins or receives unexpectedly (ODO) EDIT: My “unintended”
part. Like @Tim and @Tim said, this can also be used metaphorically to refer to gains other than financial, but it doesn’t quite convey the ‘unintended’ part.
Whether you are looking for an idiom, rather than a single word,
consider: pennies from heaven, a stroke of luck
But again, these don’t quite cover the ‘unintended result of your own action’.
- 397292 views
- 249 answers
- 146150 votes
-
Asked on September 11, 2021 in Meaning.
What is an idiom?
- This
word from Charlie from this clip said “Alan, he was happy to see his
friends. ” “Alan: he was happy to see his friends. Is being away from you just like gravy? If the benefit
is financial, you could also use… windfall an amount
of
money that somebody wins or receives unexpectedly (ODO) EDIT: My “unintended”
part. Like @Tim and @Tim said, this can also be used metaphorically to refer to gains other than financial, but it doesn’t quite convey the ‘unintended’ part.
Whether you are looking for an idiom, rather than a single word,
consider: pennies from heaven, a stroke of luck
But again, these don’t quite cover the ‘unintended result of your own action’.
- 397292 views
- 249 answers
- 146150 votes