167milk
it's no use crying over spilled milk
If you tell someone `it's no use crying over spilled milk', you are telling them that it is pointless to worry or be upset about something that has happened and cannot be changed.
She couldn't help but wonder, though, if knowing the truth would have made any more loving toward not that there was any point in crying over spilled milk.
I'm a man, I can take it. I ain't going to cry over spilt milk, I was beaten fair and square.
milk and honey
the land of milk and honey
You can describe a time or a situation in which you are very contented and have plenty of money as a time of milk and honey. This is a literary expression.
Many of the musicians working with him, including Charlie Parker, made the biggest money of their careers. It was an era of milk and honey for jazz.
The days of milk and honey are back -- at least for US equity salesmen in the City.
You can use milk and honey before a noun.
In her best-selling guide to household management for today's woman, Shirley Conran urged her readers to ignore the `impossible milk and honey standards of the impossible TV housewife.'
This expression is a shortened form of the land of milk and honey which describes a place where people will be happy and have plenty of food and wealth.
They represent the golden when we lived in the land of milk and honey.
milk and water
If you describe something or someone as milk and water, you mean that they are weak and ineffectual. This expression is used in British English.
Now, looking at the faces around her, Amy realized that her own groping ideas were as weak and vague as milk and water beside the ideals that flared here.
Fryer dismissed the Cadbury report as milk and water.
You can use milk and water before a noun.
The only time we have ever won an election, is when in it was fought on principle; and 1974 were also quite strong on every other time we've put forward this milk and water liberalism, and we've lost.
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