In my bones, “Feel it in my bones”

Do you feel like “it’s in my bones” sounds natural? I have never seen or heard any native speakers use something like that, except in a subtitle of a movie I watched long ago.

What are some other phrases to state something similar?

I can not swim yet. However, I can hardly stand to make some noise.

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9 Answer(s)

I feel it In My bones, is to use an English idiom which means: something that you say

when you are certain something is true or will happen, even you have zero proof Options could be: I’ve

got a gut

  • feeling I can feel
  • it All of these imply
  • that the speaker has

some internal feeling which leads him to believe something, whether or not there are facts to support it.

Answered on March 17, 2021.
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I feel it In My bones, is to use an English idiom which means: something that you say

when you are certain something is true or will happen, even you have zero proof Options could be: I’ve

got a gut

  • feeling I can feel
  • it All of these imply
  • that the speaker has

some internal feeling which leads him to believe something, whether or not there are facts to support it.

Answered on March 17, 2021.
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“Feel it in my bones” is a valid statement, and sounds entirely natural. Why does the legend say that if someone has an rheumatric illness and cold and wet weather approaches, they will feel pain in their bones? At

least, you’ve got an intuition, and hunch that someone might succeed, as in “I’m sure he’ll succeed I’m sure it can be felt in my bones.. “. This expression alludes to the age-old notion that persons with a healed broken bone or with arthritis experience bone pain before rain, due to a drop in barometric pressure, and therefore can predict a weather change. see first example.

Answered on March 17, 2021.
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I feel it In My bones, is to use an English idiom which means: something that you say

when you are certain something is true or will happen, even you have zero proof Options could be: I’ve

got a gut

  • feeling I can feel
  • it All of these imply
  • that the speaker has

some internal feeling which leads him to believe something, whether or not there are facts to support it.

Answered on March 18, 2021.
Add Comment

I feel it In My bones, is to use an English idiom which means: something that you say

when you are certain something is true or will happen, even you have zero proof Options could be: I’ve

got a gut

  • feeling I can feel
  • it All of these imply
  • that the speaker has

some internal feeling which leads him to believe something, whether or not there are facts to support it.

Answered on March 18, 2021.
Add Comment

I feel it In My bones, is to use an English idiom which means: something that you say

when you are certain something is true or will happen, even you have zero proof Options could be: I’ve

got a gut

  • feeling I can feel
  • it All of these imply
  • that the speaker has

some internal feeling which leads him to believe something, whether or not there are facts to support it.

Answered on March 18, 2021.
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Now that you see it, that is indeed an English phrase. Do you’d rather say “I can feel it in my bones”, which means “My intuition is telling me so.” ”

“Sometimes, the words are ” “No matter what.” And some people get so frustrated by the phrase “No matter what”

Answered on March 26, 2021.
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I feel it In My bones, is to use an English idiom which means: something that you say

when you are certain something is true or will happen, even you have zero proof Options could be: I’ve

got a gut

  • feeling I can feel
  • it All of these imply
  • that the speaker has

some internal feeling which leads him to believe something, whether or not there are facts to support it.

Answered on March 26, 2021.
Add Comment

Now that you see it, that is indeed an English phrase. Do you’d rather say “I can feel it in my bones”, which means “My intuition is telling me so.” ”

“Sometimes, the words are ” “No matter what.” And some people get so frustrated by the phrase “No matter what”

Answered on March 26, 2021.
Add Comment

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