View allAll Photos Tagged Phrase,

phrase out of Robbie Williams' song 'Feel' : www.youtube.com/watch?v=UGxfRsQe0x0

turned this one grey and sung along as many times and more... with whole my heart... mind you, only the words I like about it!

 

this picture is sooc

The phrase originates with the practice of professional photographers taking photographs of small children. Photographers often try to distract the child with an interesting toy held to the side of the camera, so that the child will be looking toward the camera when the picture is taken.

The phrase continued on to be the words of choice used by photographers everywhere to command the attention of their subjects.

'Say cheese' is of course another popular and well known phrase.

 

Actually.... if the truth be known, the people on the pier seemed more fixed on and/or intrigued with what I was doing with my camera, rather than that of the fly by seagull..

One of those stock phrases you often hear on the UK Weather Forecast.

 

Autumn weather in the North York Moors

HCS 😊😊😍

 

The Phrase Finder

The meaning and origin of the expression: Go out on a limb

www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/out-on-a-limb.html

 

Thank you for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day! ❤️ ❤️❤️

The word derives from the Middle English phrase wo begon. The wo in this phrase simply means "woe," but begon is a past participle meaning "beset." Someone who is woebegone, therefore, is beset with woe. It was the first word that came to mind when I saw this Red-capped Mangabey.

 

Please admire her beautiful eyes in Large!

Thank you so much for your visit!

 

Peeblespair Website ~ Instagram~ Artfully Giving

Battle flags hanging in Worcester Cathedral. The phrase 'laid up' means when a battle flag has served its purpose and is 'put to rest', see link for a more 'in depth' explanation. Handheld, Hisy remote, Zeiss ExoLens (Wide-Angle) gently tickled in Snapseed on iPad Pro.

 

More info.:-

 

www.crwflags.com/fotw/flags/rel-use.html#laid

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©2016 Len Chung, All rights reserved. Please don't use this image without my permission.

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While the song doesn't much fit the photo, the phrase The Autumn leaves have got you thinking kept running through my head. This picture was yet another challenge and I am finally learning how to function in Black Dragon.

 

Hair: Truth - Farryn (proof that old hair is still usable)

Outfit: ExiA - Valkyrie (Old Gacha but still available on Marketplace)

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=rUdbbC3Beo4

 

The autumn leaves have got you thinking

About the first time that you fell, fell

You didn't love the boy too much

No, no you just loved the boy too well, yeah

So you live from day to day

And you dream about tomorrow

And the hours go by like minutes

And the shadows come to stay

So you take a little something to make them go away

And I could have done so many things, baby

If I could only stop my mind

From wondering what I left behind

And from worrying about this wasted time

www.alegiorgiartphoto.com

 

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A phrase often used to describe returning to a previously familiar place (for me that would be Coventry, then North Bedfordshire and currently Northumberland), one theory states that the phrase has its roots in animal behaviour.

 

This Chillingham wild bull was literally in his stamping ground according to our ranger guide, and we had to make way for him. Apparently he often used it to posture in sight of the rest of the herd (they weren't taking a blind bit of notice as can be seen in the previous upload). And once he had shown us humans who was boss, he returned down the hill to resume his grazing.

 

As a random aside, The Stamping Ground is a single and an album from my (probably!) all-time favourite band - Runrig.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=iInyKXj2JiM

 

100x 2022 - Northumberland - 34/100

A phrase my Mom used to use when I was impatient.

 

Means a long while, The phrase itself is a farming phrase. You put cows out to pasture in the morning after they've been milked, and they come "back home" to the barn in the late evening to be milked again. So "until the cows come home" really just means "all day".

The song thrush is a familiar bird, brown above, with a white belly covered in black, drop-shaped spots. It is smaller and a warmer brown than the Mistle Thrush, and lacks the white eyestripe and red flank patches of the Redwing.The song thrush is a small, familiar songbird, commonly found in parks and gardens, woodland and scrub. Living up to its common name, it has a beautiful, loud song with repeating phrases. Widespread throughout Europe, and as far east as Siberia, northern populations are migratory, heading to Africa, whereas our song thrushes tend to be residents. From March until April, song thrushes breed, often producing three broods of up to five blue, spotty eggs.Song thrushes will eat all kinds of food, but earthworms make up a large part of their diet. When the ground becomes too hard to get at them, song thrushes will eat snails instead. To get at the meat inside, they take the shell and crack it open by banging it against a stone 'anvil'. This behaviour is unique to these birds.

Religious inscriptions cover the reddish walls of an abandoned building, reminiscent of Salvatore in "The Name of Rose" who welcomed the visitors of the monastery with the cry "Penitenziagite!"! Salvatore, ex-Dolciniano, speaks a mixed language of Latin and vulgar. His cry refers to the internal struggles of the medieval church, between the Catholic bishops and the spiritual movement, carried out by the followers of Fra 'Dolcino da Novara. The word "Penitenziagite" is a contraction of the Latin phrase "Paenitentiam agite" ("do Penance"), a phrase with which the Dolcinians admonished the people as they passed.

 

The phrase cupboard love is a British idiom originating in the mid 1700s and used most commonly in the United Kingdom and Australia. It describes the selfish, greedy or insincere affection shown, usually, by children or animals towards someone who they think will give them something that they want. Pets are most frequently described as demonstrating cupboard love when they want food.

 

Created for the Vivid Art Group Contest Vivid Red

 

Thank you for taking the time to visit, comment, fave or invite. I really appreciate them all.

 

All photos used are my own.

 

All rights reserved. This photo is not authorized for use on your blogs, pin boards, websites or use in any other way. You may NOT download this image without written permission from lemon~art.

For some that phrase would describe their eyes after a late night of partying and ringing in the New Year. For me on this first morning of the 20s, it meant first-light reaching Towers of the Virgin in Zion National Park.

 

Being a native East-Coaster, who has transplanted to life on the West Coast, I still feel that the New Year occurs when the crystal ball drops in New York, and that's the end. So, with the aide of staid Springdale, Utah, it was easy to get an early bedtime on New Years Eve so we could begin the trek to the Canyon Overlook Trail at 6:00 AM to catch first-light and sunrise from this vantage.

 

The trail is a relatively flat mile hike with a few tricky spots where the ice and slickrock conspire to give even the most sure-footed concern in the dark. Once we reached the overlook, I was a little concerned that our cold trek may have been for naught, due to the heavy cloud cover. Though they were thick overhead, there still was some clearing to the East, along the sun on the horizon to light a narrow band, reflecting off the cloud bottoms and warming the sheer rocks faces of the Temple of the Virgin ahead. This image was captured about 10-15 minutes before the local sunrise time, and is considerably brighter than what we saw with our eyes, due to the 20-second exposure.

 

Once the actual sun rays reached the Temple directly, the light only lit the areas seen here in red for less than 5 minutes before disappearing above the clouds for the remainder of the day.

 

Recognition:

Merit, Nature/Landscape category - JAN 24 PPSDC Image Competition, San Diego

 

Selected for Display, Color Scenic Landscape: Winter - JUN-JUL 2023, International Exhibition of Photography, San Diego County Fair, Del Mar Racetrack and Fairgrounds, CA

..everyone is tired of the heat and is silent. No strength to speak. Very hot... From time to time someone says this already obvious phrase.. "..PANAS.. panaaas....!! " ("Heat..!")

 

West Irian, Papua New Guinea island. A representative of the dominant minority, a migrant from the island of Java, rests in the shade in the house of a Papuan from the Lani tribe. Such a picture is not single, fallow deer are open to communication.

Approximately like the inhabitants of the island of Cuba during the struggle for independence. They believe in Chegevara, Bob Marley, they are inspired by the ideas of justice, and they dream of becoming masters of their land. An extremely dangerous for them religion for today... Today, the Lani tribe has scattered around the island and, instead of hereditary tribal territories, and they stray in the lands of other Papuan peoples.

 

I shot this on Fuji Reala 100iso film, heavily damaged by the heat and fumes in these swampy rainforests, on Nikon FM2, 35mm series E lens.

Epson V600 scanned

 

a little more photos from Papua New Guinea in album here :

www.flickr.com/photos/zoombablog/albums/72177720296962443

 

www.instagram.com/kisterblog

Dos sendas de luz reposan en el agua. Frágil frontera de sombras y reflejos, que juegan con frases al aire . Frases etéreas ,que al decirlas ya son pasado…Instantes que Eolo lleva…F.O.G.

 

English :

 

Two paths of light rest in the water. Fragile border of shadows and reflections, which play with phrases in the air. Ethereal phrases, which in saying them are already past ... Moments that Eolo takes ... F.O.G.

"L'ARTE STA IN FAR CHE TUTTO SIA FINTO E PAIA VERO"

"VIAGGIAR DESCANTA MA CHI PARTE MONA TORNA MONA"

Maurizio Fecchio on Roomtheagency

Maurizio Fecchio on gettyimages

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Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission.

Copyright © Maurizio Fecchio 2020 All Rights Reserved

"L'ARTE STA IN FAR CHE TUTTO SIA FINTO E PAIA VERO"

"VIAGGIAR DESCANTA MA CHI PARTE MONA TORNA MONA"

Maurizio Fecchio on Roomtheagency

 

Maurizio Fecchio on gettyimages

 

youpic.com/mauriziofecchio

===========================================================================

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission.

Copyright © Maurizio Fecchio 2019 All Rights Reserved

"The literal meaning of this phrase is “let us try one more time,” or “try again.” King Henry speaks this phrase to encourage his soldiers, who are launching an attack on through a gap or breach in the walls of Harfleur.'

 

This was how I felt when it came to achieving this image. Each time I went, the conditions were only adequate and therefore, so too was the result. On this stormy day, I thought the clouds might part and let the sunshine through, but after hours waiting, it was not to be. So, admittedly I packed up to move on.

 

However, when I saw a different opportunity it was because the light was shining through and maybe it would pass over my spot. I ran as best I could which was not very well. The camera was still on the settings needed and my tripod marks revealed where I had been. Sure enough, the light came and changed everything giving the final image life. I almost titled this shot "Paid For", because as I was waiting, I was either bitten or stung by some rather large flyer on the arm. The things we do to get the shot. Yikes!

Geordnet ist's einfacher. Erbsen zählen.

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And? How many are there? I mean the peas, not the ice crystals ;-) We don't want to be petty ... "Counting peas" is a phrase and in English means "to nitpick", that means being petty, stingy or fussy.

The peas are, in the saying, the symbol of the small and of little value. So if you are a bean counter, you dedicate your time to something that is actually not worth it. In any case, here is "everything in the green", another phrase – and that is translated in English: Everything’s rosy in the garden. ;-) And how is it expressed in all the countless languages ​​of the world? Well, then we don't want to be like this (...), to each his own and how he likes it ... I like peas and especially how different they are when you look closely ;-)

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Und? Wieviele sind es? Ich meine die Erbsen, nicht die Eiskristalle ;-) Da wollen wir mal nicht kleinlich sein ... "Erbsen zählen" ist eine Redensart und bedeutet im Englischen "to nitpick", also kleinlich, geizig oder pingelig sein.

Die Erbsen sind in der Redensart das Sinnbild des Kleinen und wenig Wertvollen. Wer also ein Erbsenzähler ist, widmet seine Zeit einer Sache, die dies eigentlich nicht wert ist. Hier ist jedenfalls "alles im grünen Bereich", noch so eine Redewendung – und die wird im Englischen so übersetzt: Everything’s rosy in the garden. ;-) Und wie wird es in all den unzähligen Sprachen dieser Welt ausgedrückt? Na, dann wollen wir mal nicht so sein, jedem das Seine und wie er es mag ... Ich jedenfalls mag Erbsen und auch besonders, wie unterschiedlich sie sind, wenn man genau hinsieht ;-)

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Ingredients: green frozen peas, board, daylight outside

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Zutaten: grüne gefrorene Erbsen, Brett, Tageslicht draußen

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#LookingCloseOnFriday / #AllGreen / #TodoVerde

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#MacroMondays 2020 / June 01 / #FillTheFrame / HMM to everyone!

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Nikon Micro-Nikkor-P / 1:3.5 / 55 mm / added Nikkor M2 1:1

HCS 😊😊😍

 

Insider

13 Everyday Phrases That Actually Came From Shakespeare

www.businessinsider.com/everyday-phrases-from-shakespeare...

 

Thank you for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day! ❤️❤️❤️

HCS 😊😊😍

 

The Phrase Finder

www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/giddy-goat.html

 

Thank you for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day! ❤️ ❤️❤️

Sevenfold Insignificance

Fallen bicycles in China

 

In German "The phrase "A sack of rice (or bicycle) fell over in China (or Beijing)" is a colloquial metaphor for an unimportant event. With this derogatory, joking phrase, the speaker expresses his disinterest or signals the perceived insignificance of a topic." de.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_China_ist_ein_Sack_Reis_umgefallen

 

On the campus of Hefei University in Hefei, the capital of the province Anhui

The remarkable thing is that this photo is a perfect illustration of that phrase in the first paragraph of Lawrence Durrell's Justine: A sky of hot nude pearl...

The phrase "Do not be afraid" is written in the Bible 365 times. That's a daily reminder from God to live everyday being fearless.

The phrase "Shepherd's Delight" will have meaning for most english speakers but for those of you whose first language is not English the phrase comes from an old saying, as follows: "Red sky at night, shepherd's delight. Red sky in the morning, shepherd's warning."

 

I've since learned that apparently the phrase first appears in the Bible in the book of Matthew. It is an old weather saying, often used at sunrise and sunset to signify the changing sky and was originally known to help the shepherds prepare for the next day's weather.

I do not believe in the phrase "less is more", it is possible that a scene photographs at least, it would be attractive, open to the collective imagination, of those who see it. But I mean something else, when words are important or when gestures are even more. I do not believe in what to say I love you, I can be replaced by, I love you, and sometimes it is not enough to say I love you if it is not accompanied by a gesture. For this photo I love you is explicit, but it has no sound. I have no doubt that you heard it.

 

No creo en la frase "menos es más", es posible que esta escena fotografica, sea atractiva, abierta a la imaginación colectiva. Pero quiero preguntar o preguntarme : cuando las palabras son importantes o cuando los gestos son aún más?. No creo en qué decir Te amo, puedo ser reemplazado por Te quiero y, a veces, no es suficiente decir Te amo si no va acompañado de un gesto. Para esta foto te amo es explícito, pero no tiene sonido. No tengo dudas de que lo escuchaste.

The phrase 'a flock of albatrosses' is not something you get to say every day! Atlantic Ocean, about 30 miles west of Cape Town, South Africa

“Dream to the max” is a phrase we hear on advertisements for lottery tickets. Gosh, the prize was up to 50 million the other day! I said to the person at the counter “ Why don’t they just offer 50 one million dollar prizes?” She replied that not as many people would buy the ticket then. They would wait until the prize was bigger. Really? My big dream is that the new year brings us tons of opportunities to go road tripping and finding nice light for photo shoots again. BUT…..it would be nice to win just one million so our children could be mortgage free. 😏. Happy Sliders Sunday!

The French phrase “lèche-vitrine” translates literally as “window-licking” and refers to window shopping. I love the expression, and attempt to engage in that activity as often as possible, no matter where I am!

HCS

 

The Phrase Finder

www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/phrases-that-begin-with-the-l...

 

Thank you for your kind visit. Have a beautiful day and spread love and kindness! ❤️❤️❤️

 

This hackneyed phrase wears thin when winter drags into spring and snowstorms visit in April and May. The title is repeated not as a happy greeting, but as a weary disappointment and sometimes with derision. Yes, this photo was taken today -- snow fell last night.

 

This was our third snow this week and another comes in two days. But that patch of blue sky nourishes optimism--it will be warm and sunny soon.

(going) down the rabbit hole

DEFINITIONS

phrase

metaphor

RLART

This phrase is posted outside of the Jordan Store in Downtown Chicago on State St. It has 3 floors. The 1st floor is the shoe store and somewhat of a museum with memorabilia and art. The 2nd floor is a gym where sponsored Jordan Brand athletes get to train and practice. The 3rd floor does apparel and shoe customizations. Pretty cool place but I couldn't get a clear shot to save my life 😅

A German phrase I've always loved for which I have no real English equivalent that says it so succinctly and with such cheer :-). (Pronounced: Fy-er arb'nt) It basically signals 'time to go home/end of the workday/you're free to go home - have a good night/weekend!'

 

Happy Fence Friday :-) from Isle D'Orleans in Quebec ...so I probably should've given this a French title ...maybe - but when I look at the floral energy bouncing through this scene, I think of how that word 'Feierabend' makes you feel energized, like you've been freed/released to go relax and have fun. Just as the flowers in this scene seem to be springing over the fence and off to do whatever the night holds in store for them. :-)

L'homme s'éclipse. Demeure un reste de présence humaine. Souvenirs d'évènements déjà lointains. Traces. Suivre la trace qui peu à peu se dissout. Dissolution. Trace. Comme l'escargot laisse derrière lui un reste de bave.

José Angel Valente

 

Il disait: se tourner vers le mur est facile. Il disait: vivre aussi est facile, mais trop difficile survivre à ce qu'on a vécu. Ce qu'il disait reste dans la bouche avec sur la langue un goût de temps qui ne revient plus. Ce qu'il disait fait silence sous les mots et c'est très loin comme un bruit de coeur qui bat.

J. Ancet - La dernière phrase

 

Il voulut écrire quelques souvenirs sur une feuille de papier, mais rien n'était plus comme avant. L'arbre fuyait son nom. Les fleurs. Les fleurs ? Il froissa le papier.

 

THANK YOU ! MERCI ! à tous ceux qui se sont arrêtés et à ceux qui ont aimé mon image ❤️

 

If someone hears the phrase: "Cosmic kite, what planet did you come from?", He knows immediately what he is talking about. The story of Víctor Hugo Morales, in that incredible play by Diego Maradona, who gambling from the middle of the field, passing to more than 6 players including the goalkeeper concluded with the goal that marked the final 2 to 1 of Argentina against the English. It was, as the most impressive goal in the history of the World Cups on June 22, 1986

 

Si alguien escucha la frase: "Barrilete cósmico, ¿de qué planeta viniste?", sabe inmediatamente de qué se está hablando. El relato de Víctor Hugo Morales, en aquella increíble jugada de Diego Maradona, que gambeteando, desde el medio de la cancha a mas de 6 jugadores incluido el arquero concluyo con el gol que marco el 2 a 1 definitivo de Argentina contra los ingleses. Quedó, como el gol más impactante de la historia de los Mundiales aquel 22 de junio de 1986

www.youtube.com/watch?v=jOz2uGMTA2w

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