T W A U ... The Chase....today's...
Film, Media & TV13 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Bert. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Sounds to me like he's preparing for some sort of verbal reasoning exam - I know that the American SATs feature those sort of questions. Also, General Studies at A-Level in the UK asks for analysis of passages, with particular emphasis placed on explaining phrases such as that in context.
So, homework, methinks...
This is a question and answer site, so why does it come as a surprise when somebody asks a question. I find kjc (who I'm sure used to post under a different name and may not be a native English speaker) posts rather interesting questions about stock phrases whose meanings we tend to assume we know, but which are quite challenging to explain accurately. And it makes a real change from some of the lightweight enquiries that often clog up the site.
And even if (s)he is a student doing homework - so what? Ignore it, and let someone else give an answer. It does't hurt you does it?
Sorry. For many of you, native speakers of English, my questions might be so self-obvious that they are worthless as questions. But I am not native speaker(I am Korean) and I have never been to USA or UK. I study English with books only. I very often encounter some words or phrases that are not in the English dictionary. So through this site I learn the exact meaning or origin of some words, expressions, etc. and that is so priceless to me. I think it's my fault not to explain the reason why I ask so many times in the first place. Even though you think that my questions are being self-obvious, silly, absurd, please forgive me and please answer my questions. Your sincere answers are as priceless as diamond to me. And if possible, please point out the wrongness in my usage of English.
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