Yeah I especially don't get the last 2. I get the idea of 2, but I also get that the point of having a cake is eating it.omega 616 said:"At the end of the day" - wtf? It's night. I think it's a way for people to carry on talking even when they haven't got anything to say, like a posh "erm".
"You can't have your cake and eat it" - well I'm not going to throw it, am I?
"It's always in the last place you look" - who finds something and carries on looking for it?
Haha, I use that phrase all the time. XDMalloryHartevelt said:Not entirely sure what these sayings are, but generally we use them and i would really like to know more. For example: cool beans.
I hope you get what i mean
But 'never'? It means 'not ever', and is almost never used in the imperative in reference to other verbs. It also sounds weird.nezroy said:It makes perfect sense. "mind", used in this context, is the "pay attention to" or "watch over" version. As in, "Could you mind the store for me while I go get a coffee?". So in this context, "never mind" translates pretty cleanly to "don't pay any attention [to what I just said/did/etc.]". Though I'd be curious to know if "don't mind me" came first, and "never mind" followed it, or if they co-evolved.tharwen said:'Never mind.'
IT MAKES NO SENSE