How can I taste my own medicine?

sampling the same unpleasantness they've been dishing out to others. Example of use: “I don't feel at all sorry that people are calling you names. You're getting a taste of your own medicine.”
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Should I give you a taste of your own medicine?

If you give someone a taste of their own medicine or a dose of their own medicine, you treat them badly in the same way that they treated you. The famously aggressive interviewer was given a taste of his own medicine today when one caller asked him a series of very direct questions.
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How do you use a taste of your own medicine in a sentence?

He is always late for appointments and keeps people waiting, so we decided to give him a taste of his own medicine. If he doesn't change his behaviour by reasoning, he's going to get a taste of his own medicine.
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What figure of speech is a taste of your own medicine?

A taste of one's own medicine and a dose of one's own medicine are two renderings of the same idiom. An idiom is a word, group of words or phrase that has a figurative meaning that is not easily deduced from its literal definition.
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Where did the phrase get a taste of your own medicine come from?

Origin. The phrase comes from Aesop's fable about a swindler who sells false medicine and claims it can cure everything. Once he gets ill, people offer him his own medicine, which he is sure will not cure him.
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MEDICINE - QUEEN NAIJA (OFFICIAL VIDEO)



What is easy way out?

phrase. If you say that someone takes the easy way out, you disapprove of them because they do what is easiest for them in a difficult situation, rather than dealing with it properly. [disapproval] As soon as things got difficult he took the easy way out.
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What are examples of idioms?

Common Idioms in English
  • Getting fired turned out to be a blessing in disguise. ...
  • These red poppies are a dime a dozen. ...
  • Don't beat around the bush. ...
  • After some reflection, he decided to bite the bullet. ...
  • I'm going to call it a night. ...
  • He's got a chip on his shoulder. ...
  • Would you cut me some slack? - Don't be so hard on me.
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What is the meaning of bent her knees in idioms?

Humbly, pleading, as in They're desperate for funds; they're asking for contributions on bended knee. This expression alludes to a traditional attitude of supplication. Bended, the past tense of bend, survives only in this idiom, elsewhere having been replaced by bent. [
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What does it mean to keep company?

Definition of keep company with

: to spend time with (someone) He keeps company with the rich and famous. " … But if you keep company with a disloyal man, we might think that you were disloyal, too.
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How do you use the last straw?

the last in a series of unpleasant events that finally makes you feel that you cannot continue to accept a bad situation: Losing my job was bad enough, but being evicted was the final straw. She's always been rude to me, but it was the last straw when she started insulting my mother.
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What does facing the music mean?

To accept unpleasant consequences: “After several years of cheating his employer, the embezzler finally had to face the music.”
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How do you use skin of your teeth in a sentence?

Just barely, very narrowly, as in Doug passed the exam by the skin of his teeth. A related term appears in the Bible (Job 19:20), where Job says, “I am escaped with the skin of my teeth,” presumably meaning he got away with nothing at all.
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What does have a taste of mean?

To have a strong preference, inclination, or desire to do or acquire something. I've never had a taste for fighting of any kind, so I know I would not be suited to the army whatsoever. Tom has a real taste for these daredevil sports.
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What does pain in the neck mean idiom?

A source of annoyance, a nuisance, as in Joan is a real pain in the neck, with her constant complaining, or Jack told his brother to stop being a pain in the ass. The first of these colloquial expressions dates from about 1900 and originated as a euphemism for the two less polite variants.
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What does the idiom draw the line means?

to put a limit on what you will do or allow to happen, esp. because you feel something is wrong: I'll do whatever my company asks me to, but I draw the line when someone asks me to lie for them. (Definition of draw the line from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)
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What is the meaning of in good faith in idioms?

believing that something is correct; believing that what you are doing is right, especially when it has bad consequences: When I recommended Simon for the job, I did it in good faith. I didn't realize that he had been in trouble with the police.
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What figure of speech is hold your horses?

Idiom – An idiom (id-ee-uh-m) is an expression whose meaning is not predictable from the usual meanings of the words that make it up, as in “He's a couch potato,” or “Hold your horses.” Idioms do not present “like” characteristics to other things as in other forms of figurative language.
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What figure of speech is Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled pepper?

a) Alliteration - Alliteration is the conspicuous repetition of identical initial consonant sounds in successive or closely associated syllables within a group of words, even those spelled differently. For example, 'Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers'. This figure of speech is usually used in poetry.
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What does spilling the beans mean?

Disclose a secret or reveal something prematurely, as in You can count on little Carol to spill the beans about the surprise. In this colloquial expression, first recorded in 1919, spill means “divulge,” a usage dating from the 1500s.
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What is the meaning of its raining cats and dogs?

to rain very heavily: Don't forget to take your umbrella - it's raining cats and dogs out there.
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What does money doesn't grow on trees mean?

saying. said to warn someone to be careful how much money they spend, because there is only a limited amount: "Mom, I'd like a new bike." "I'll have to think about it - money doesn't grow on trees, you know!" SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.
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