This phrase is drawing attention to the paradoxical nature of "time". Time is a creation of human beings that corresponds with the natural rotation of the earth in relation to the solar system and does not exist as a real entity, therefore future and past as such do not exist. Everything that happens happens in the present moment and that is all there really is. So the future is NOW, because Now is the only real time to affect any needed change or remedy. To place your hapiness or solutions to your problems in some future moment which does not exist is one of the normal but insane daily practices of the human race.
The phrase 'come full circle' refers to getting back to the original position or the original state of affairs. The origin of the phrase is unknown, but is used in the Western world.
Ezekiel, chapter 3, verses 8 and 9
The phrase "forty winks" comes from an issue of Punch Magazine in 1872. This article was describing the Articles of Faith found in the Church of England.
Turn in "go to bed" is attested from 1695, originally nautical.
I understood the term to be rhyming slang for 'For Free', origin un-known. I understood the term to be rhyming slang for 'For Free', origin un-known. See related link for answer.
The origin of the phrase 'two peas in a pod' is from 16th century England. It is a simile that was created by John Lyly. It used to be a very popular phrase, now it has become less common.
There is no such phrase as "eat you".
Yes, "in the future" is a prepositional phrase. "In" is the preposition, and "the future" is the object of the preposition.
Cosmology is the study of the origin and future of the universe.
There is no such phrase. There is a word rampage. It is of Scottish origin, perhaps from RAMP, to rear up.
The phrase of Greek origin referring to the common people is "hoi polloi."
"on the rocks"
The Spanish for "I have put" is he puesto, could this be the origin?
The tense of the verb phrase "will be waiting" is future continuous tense. It indicates an action that will be ongoing in the future.
'Now and then', as sense of "at various times" attested from circa1550; earlier 'then and then' (c.1205). 'Then and now', as sense of (continuing) historic precedent from land title adjudication circa 12th. century.
sumething
god