English idiom similar to “grab one, hit the other”

In my native language there is an idiom which literally says “grab one, hit the other”. What are some negative traits of a group of people? the way the way that you communicate frustration and annoyance is defined. It is a humongous, unsettling, frustrating sensation.

Is there an all out idiom in English? Why?

Why do we complain less about data.

Asked on February 27, 2021 in Other.
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For the first person to love paint, tarred with the same brush would be the first.

Whilst you sit there looking at the graph. and clicking on the line. Has the same characteristics as someone, having the same good or bad points as someone else.

Jack and Mae are tarred with the same brush. Could these two be crooks? Does the Smith family get tarred each time because the same brush is used on them? They’re lazy.

http://idioms.thefreedictionary.com/index.php. com/tarred+with+the-same+brush

You can also consider six of one, half a dozen of the other. Do not have a negative meaning and it is usually used when you think that neither of two choices or people is better than the other.

  1. What is an alternative to idiomatic?
  2. (idiomatic, of two people) Equally involved; equally responsible

http://en.wikipedia.org//. How

do you know that your friends & families have sixty-one friends and one half a dozen of the other?

Answered on February 27, 2021.
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One bad apple spoils the barrel. Is that true?

Answered on February 27, 2021.
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One expression for this is “Robbing Peter to pay Paul. Can I have fun and do something that helps other

people pay off something?

Answered on February 27, 2021.
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The idiom you are looking for is “to rob Peter to pay Paul”, meaning that you borrow something from someone to give it to someone else.

In Britain, it means the Church tax was to be paid to St. Peter’s Inn (a city in the area called Rome) and Paul’s in London. As was used in the Roman Empire, it means the church tax was to be paid to another church in Rome to make money to pay the Paul tax.

(More information about this can be found in: http://en.wikipedia.org/). org/wiki/Rub_Peter_to_pay_Paul/ )

Answered on February 27, 2021.
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Is it a similar story if people are “birds of feather”? If you share common traits with other people they hang out with, and vice versa. It also suggests that people who share common traits tend to hang out with each other.

What are the undesirable traits compared to positive traits?

Which is the best online dictionary of American English idioms? “Mike

and Steve got caught shoplifting the other day” “Well, they’re birds of a feather so that’s not surprising.” Is

it true “We don’t know this”? What happens to everyone’s life?

Answered on February 27, 2021.
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