Life is like a big pie. Each experience is one segment or slice. That does not mean it has been a good or bad experience, just a slice or part of the whole.
Here slice of tongue Truns up at the
mean*
Shakespeare used the expression "up in arms" in Henry VI Part II. "The commons here in Kent are up in arms." It means (because its meaning has not changed any) that they have armed themselves and are ready for battle.
It is an expression of dismay, like "Oh, dear!" or "Oh, crap!"
Life is like a big pie. Each experience is one segment or slice. That does not mean it has been a good or bad experience, just a slice or part of the whole.
It has been a good time.
eat a slice of pizza
like pecause of cake but slice of pie mean something that's Easy
In "The Red Badge of Courage," the phrase "slice up" can refer to the act of engaging in combat or warfare, where soldiers may use their weapons to cut or slice through enemy forces. This term is often associated with the graphic and violent nature of battle scenes depicted in the novel.
The phrase 'slice and dice' is typically used when referring to the way a food is prepared. When someone wants something sliced and diced, they usually mean that they want a food or an object sliced up and then diced up.
well it depends I think you mean to cook up a plan or somthing, then it is just to think it up or plan it
290a+5b
Slice pan is rhyming slang for van.
Doki is a Japanese expression for a sped-up heartbeat .
To have a drink straight up means with nothing added
Doing nothing -- Standing around with your thumb up your nose.