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  1. 2016年6月27日 · I believe that you are referring to the idiomatic meanings. nailed it. to complete a task successfully or get something right. Example. A: Oh, you didn't burn the cake this time. B: Yep, nailed it! Nail down can have a similar meaning. nail down. : to make (something, such as a victory) certain to happen.

  2. Like, it was supposed to sound something like "hammer, meet anvil"--the anvil is hardened, so the hammer breaks. But he's calling himself the nail, and nails get pounded down by hammers. So it makes you giggle a little after you hear it.

  3. 2021年3月16日 · If they nail vaccinations, drugstores will be the heroes of 2021. Checking the definition of nail in the dictionary does not make any sense to me fasten with a nail or nails. "the strips are simply nailed to the roof" INFORMAL detect or catch (someone, especially a

  4. One doesn't hammer a nail into a spot. One hammers it into a wall or plank or similar at a particular point. Thus, prefer: to hammer a nail into the wall at this point/spot. If you were pointing to the spot, you would just say here.

  5. As a declarative statement, you would say: You know what it is. Making this into a question requires that you add the auxiliary verb do in front of the subject. That's all you need to do to turn this statement into a question. You don't need to do anything to theknow

  6. If you are asking someone to do something wrong and you offer to scratch their back in return, then the context gives the phrase a different nuance. Finally, proverbs and sayings are not actually very common, particularly in written English, and can become clichés, which good speakers try to avoid.

  7. 2020年3月25日 · I went through its meanings on dictionary. From a place or position: He walked off in a huff. a. At a certain distance in space or time: a mile off; a week off. b. From a given course or route; aside: The car swerved off into a ditch. c. Into a state of unconsciousness: I must have dozed off. a.

  8. While you could say this, some listeners might think you're trying to make a sexual allusion. The verb "to nail" is well-known slang for having sex with someone (particularly if it's a man doing the "nailing"), and the idiom "to fuck the shit out of" is also well-known.

  9. 2018年3月20日 · 1. I got my hair stuck in the nail 2. My hair got stuck in the nail. I Know about this 1. I got my hair cut - Means - Having some one else do the hair cut 2. I cut my hair - Means - doing the hair cut by the same person. The sequence [subject] got [object] [past tense verb] usually implies ...by someone else.

  10. 2023年11月26日 · @Richard You’re right that you wouldn’t normally hold a single peanut between your fingers for flicking, but where you place the peanut doesn’t really matter. It’s the sudden, quick movement of the index or middle finger that makes it a flick, and the video clearly shows that.

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