Merkavar said:
One of the saying i dont understand is "from the bottom of my heart". why is thanking someone from the bottom of your heart any better than the top or side of your heart?
The deeper something is, the greater the amount. In the context of the saying, it's the depth and therefore sincerity of the sentiment.
TheDarkEricDraven said:
"The exception that proves the rule". What the fuck does that mean? If its an exception, it doesn't prove anything!
Because the rule may be, for example, "There is always a chance of anything and everything going wrong all at once and at any given moment, regardless of the planning and preparation beforehand", then if something does indeed go wrong
despite aforementioned preperation, it is an exception to the circumstance. (You would expect something you have prepared for to go smoothly, but this 0.1% chance it didn't) Therefore it is the exception that has proved the rule that no matter the preparation, something at some point may inevitably go wrong regardless of how high the probability that it won't - Murphy's Law, in this case.
Shreder55 said:
"At the wrong place at the wrong time"
Never really got it. If your at the wrong place at the wrong time then you should be fine because its the wrong time.
It's meant to be taken as two halves. You could be in the wrong place, but if you had come at any other time, you would be fine. Likewise, if you were to be at a different place during the exact time of the unfortunate coincidence, it wouldn't affect you because you wouldn't be present at that exact moment. You were at the wrong place, and at the wrong time. The conjunctive is removed in the saying due to colloquialism.
Arkvoodle said:
"Greatest thing since sliced bread." What the hell's so great about bread slices???
Back in the olden days, there wasn't really such a thing as a basic lunch. You would have to spend forever over a stove cooking a proper meal, or go without. The sandwich was not invented until the 18th century, when the Earl of Sandwich demanded he have his meat between two slices of bread as he had no time to eat it otherwise. He grew fond of this as it let him do other things while eating, and thus the sandwich was born.
Bread has been a staple of peasant diet since long before this though, and that is because bread is relatively cheap to make and produce. So for the peasantry to be able to live off such a simple, versatile food, it was considered pretty great. That's just speculation, though, i can't say when this phrase properly entered circulation.
supersupersuperguy said:
I've never understood what it meant to "have one's cake and eat it too". I mean, what else are you going to do with a cake?
This comes from greed and self restraint. Like wrong place at the wrong time, it is twofold. Acquiring the cake is seen as a form of reward, and if you consume the cake immediately after, it is more reward without effort. You must work to obtain the cake, and then save it until after you have worked some more. If you try to overextend yourself, you will not only have the buyer's remorse later on when you realise the cake is already gone, but you will feel no incentive to work hard again afterwards.
There's several phrases i don't understand, the majority of which are American. I can't think of any just yet, but when i do, i'll edit it in.