If you are on the fence, you are not on one side or the other -- this means you have trouble making up your mind about that particular issue.
Ex: My husband and children would like a dog, but I am still on the fence.
It's a figure of speech for hesitating about something.
it means you don't know which side to take...for example...do you like chocolate or vanilla more? If you cant decide, you are stuck in the middle...you are "sitting on the fence"
"Sitting on the fence" describes a person who is undecided about an issue, rather than taking a firm stand on one side or the other. In Congress such persons are wooed by both sides of the aisle for their vote on some issue regardless of their political affiliation. Another term for someone "sitting on the fence" is "mugwump" - someone who sits uselessly "on the fence" of indecision, with their "mug" on one side and their "wump" on the other side.
Indecision. To remain between two sides of an argument.
it means you dont know which side to take...for example...do you like chocolate or vanilla more? If you cant decide, you are stuck in the middle...you are "sitting on the fence"
To sit on the fence means to remain undecided between alternatives, usually political ones. "Are you for or against this policy?" "I don't know; I guess I'm still sitting on the fence."
To sit on the fence comes from arguements nieghbours would have over the back garden fences. The term to "sit on the fence" meant you weren't in either garden, so you didn't take a side in the arguement.
Indecision. To remain between two sides of an argument.
It means someone isn't deciding between two things
"Straddling the fence" means you can't make up your mind what side you're on. You can't decide on something.
Sitting on the fence means like you're stuck in the middle, you can't decide what exactly you want to , for example-do you like ice cream or juice? Ans. I don't know, I am still sitting on the fence(neither this side nor that side)
Politicians often don't want to chose a side in an argument because they fear offending potential voters. So they sit on the fence, which is middle ground, a figurative neutral zone.
It's not an idiom, it's a simile. Someone is uglier than a fence used to stop mud from flowing across a field.
The phrase "over the fence" or also known as "on the fence" is a common English idiom. It means when a person has to choose between two sides.
This is not an idiom. Idioms are phrases that don't mean anything unless you know the definition. This is a sentence saying that your photograph or painting or drawing is sitting atop a piano.
This is a sports idiom. If you're not playing well enough, the coach makes you sit on the sidelines of the field instead of joining the game. If you are sitting on the sidelines, you are not participating. You have been "benched." The idiom means that you're not part of whatever is going on.
"To be" is not an idiom - it's a verb.
" Sitting on the fence" is an idiom that means being undecided or neutral on an issue.
A good idiom would be "sitting on the fence."
The meaning of this idiom is "an easy target".
It's not an idiom, it's a simile. Someone is uglier than a fence used to stop mud from flowing across a field.
The phrase "over the fence" or also known as "on the fence" is a common English idiom. It means when a person has to choose between two sides.
from the early 1800's from an American politician who described his position 'as a man sitting on the fence, with clean boots, watching carefully, which way he may leap to keep out of the mud,
This is not an idiom. Idioms are phrases that don't mean anything unless you know the definition. This is a sentence saying that your photograph or painting or drawing is sitting atop a piano.
It's not an idiom because it means just what it seems to mean. You should stay on the side of the fence that you are currently on and not climb over.
The phrase "on the fence" is an example of an idiom, specifically one that is used to describe someone who is undecided or uncommitted about a particular issue or decision.
There's a cowboy sitting on the fence.
This is a sports idiom. If you're not playing well enough, the coach makes you sit on the sidelines of the field instead of joining the game. If you are sitting on the sidelines, you are not participating. You have been "benched." The idiom means that you're not part of whatever is going on.
"To be" is not an idiom - it's a verb.