LONG IN THE TOOTH and A PIG IN A POKE:

 FROM SAMPATH’S DESK:

LONG IN THE TOOTH and A PIG IN A POKE:


 

LONG IN THE TOOTH:

 

Meaning:

 

If you describe someone as LONG IN THE TOOTH, you are saying unkindly or humourously that they are old or getting old - old or aging - the idiom was used originally for horses because their gums recede with age - the term can be used to mean ‘they are getting old, often too old, for a particular activity or purpose' - rather too old to do something

 

 

Example sentences:

 

Ram is getting to be pretty LONG IN THE TOOTH.

 

Aren’t you a bit LONG IN THE TOOTH to start being an undergraduate? 

 

Our poor cat is so LONG IN THE TOOTH that he struggles just walking around the house these days.

 

I think Dad may be getting a little senile (old, weak, and/or absent-minded); he is a bit LONG IN THE TOOTH.

 

I think I am too LONG IN THE TOOTH to take up this stressful job.

 

Sorry my dear, you are a little LONG IN THE TOOTH to understand the situation and appropriately handle it.

 

My grandfather always said that he was LONG IN THE TOOTH but he had more knowledge about the business than we do. Yes, he was right.

 

Although LONG IN THE TOOTH now, my granny has some fascinating and moral-lesson-giving stories to tell us.

 

 

 

A PIG IN A POKE

 

Meaning:

 

Something you buy or accept without first properly seeing, assessing, and/or finding out if it is good or not - indicates that an offer, deal, or proposal has been foolishly accepted without prior examination or weighing its pros and cons - buying or accepting without being aware of its true nature, value, and/or use - to agree to or take something without sight or knowledge of it in advance - something not adequately appraised or of undetermined value, as an offering or purchase – something offered in such a way as to obscure its real worth and usefulness

 

 

Example sentences:

 

Be careful about buying that old car. It might turn out to be A PIG IN A POKE.

 

As a careless person, he always buys A PIG IN A POKE.

 

I want to see the tennis racket before I agree to the price. I don’t want to buy A PIG IN A POKE.

 

Consumers need to be alert, cautious, mindful, and wary in case they buy A PIG IN A POKE and find no legal means of protecting their rights.

 

That scheme could be A PIG IN A POKE, who knows! It is too early to fret (worry, bother, fear, or disagree) or celebrate.

 

Offers of and deals with that fraudulent company which was closed two years ago and now come back with a new name and brands may turn out to be A PIG IN A POKE. Be careful.

 

 

 

Proverbs:

 

சிறு துரும்பும் பல்லுக் குத்த உதவும்.

Even a small fibre may serve as a toothpick.

 

பன்றியோடு கூடிய கன்றும் மலம் தின்னும்.

A calf that goes with a pig will eat excrement.



 

(R.SAMPATH)

20/6/2023

Comments

  1. LONG IN THE TOOTH and A PIG IN A POKE:

    Well, they say, Beg, Borrow, But don't steal. Yes. I have not begged, but I have requested , I have borrowed and I do steal Sampath ji 's unique way of playing around with words.

    Today the couple of phrases are something that even if I came across somewhere, I don't think I would have paused to try to understand it. I feel so dumb. But that's the truth.

    The English language is full of bizarre English phrases, idioms and proverbs, which, when taken literally, seem to make no sense at all.
    But because of Sampath ji 's untiring effort, we can decipher them and try to imbibe them in our written communication.

    Thanks Sampath ji

    Kamala Subramanian
    20.6.21

    ReplyDelete

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