That's what she said!
You have probably heard the phrase "these colors don't run" Meaning the people in said country are not cowards. I don't know if the phrase is used outside the USA however
they said OMG!!!!
If you mean four score and seven years ago, it was said by Abraham Lincoln, the first words from his Gettysburg Address.
In 1877, in reference to Lucy Ware Webb Hayes. Most first ladies are said to have hated the label.
The phrase 'out and about' is believed to first be said in the late 1800s. There is no record of who first used the phrase but it's of British origins.
said to a female: at leebee (את ליבי) said to a male: atah leebee (אתה ליבי)
Nobody knows who first said it, but it has been used as a phrase in many movies.
The TV show, The Office made that phrase pretty popular, but the first time that the phrase was used was from Wayne's World back in 1992. It is an example of a phrase that is considered a double entendre.
Exactly as worded, yes, in Genesis 8:21.
I love youI try but I can't grow a new heart because the one I have aches for you...(kurt cobain said the part in bold)
It's from a Golden Corral TV spot.
The phrase breaking bread means to share a meal so I'm assuming your friends, or whomever said the phrase in your question, simply went home to eat.
There is no phrase to be said. The person may be called indigent.
I believe that was Patrick Henry, and he actually said it in the First Continental Congress
Charles Jackson Smith, Sr. 1960
January Jones