and this is what he bought for me.


Let the fun begin! 🙂


Thank you Sweetie!
Hello and welcome!
Since writing about idioms I’ve been paying a lot of attention to the things people say and their use of idioms. This week our idiom comes courtesy of my husband. It is his goose is cooked .
According to Idioms at the Free Dictionary.com one’s goose is cooked means:
1. One is thoroughly defeated, ruined, or finished.
2. One is facing inescapable punishment for some trouble one is in or has caused.
At the Grammarist.com I learned that the origin of this phrase is uncertain. They tell us: The origin of the expression goose is cooked is not really known; many stories that are not based in fact currently circulate on the internet. The most likely origin of the popular saying goose is cooked is the Aesop fable about the goose that laid the golden egg. In the story, greedy people are not content to wait for the goose to lay its golden eggs; they kill the goose in order to obtain the golden eggs immediately in order to have a lot of money all at once, and they find they have ruined their source of good fortune. However, even this origin story is dubious, because the famous phrase goose is cooked did not come into popular use until the mid-1800s.
Whatever the case I hope you do not find yourself in a situation where “Your goose is cooked.”
Have you ever used this phrase?
Hello and welcome!
Our idiom this week is on the ball – a phrase I found myself using this week while talking to my daughter.
Theidioms.com tells us that on the ball means:
alert to new trends, ideas, and methods
knowledgeable and competent
alert, in command of senses, attentive
understands the situation well
quick to understand and react to a situation
(Yes my daughter was on the ball 🙂 )
They also tell us: This phrase originated in sports, specifically in ball games where the players were asked to keep their “eyes on the ball.” The current usage of the expression began in the 1900s and it is a shorter version of the original term, ‘keep your eye on the ball.’ This phrase is first seen in sports, such as baseball, cricket, and golf. The oldest citation in prints dates back to 1864. Source: theidioms.com
Do you use this phrase?
Hello and welcome!
Our idiom this week is a hard (tough) nut to crack.
The Idioms.com tells us this phrase means:
a problem that is difficult to solve
a person that is difficult to deal with
someone or something that is difficult to understand or
a person hard to get to know or to get close to
This expression is a metaphor alluding to the tough exterior of a nutshell and how hard they are to crack open. It has been in use since the 1700s.
Have you ever used this expression?
Something a little different today. Push play on the music link then, while listening, scroll down to view a slide show of this morning at the farm. I hope you enjoy it.