Does “burrow nose-deep” literally mean “dig in / bury deeply,” or have other figurative meanings like intimacy? To me “burrow nose-deep” in episodes of Emily Dickinson and Obama’s replacement of staff appear to be used in different meaning? Is it an idiom or simple combination of “burrow” and "nose deep.”?
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MANCHESTER, Conn. () – MCC Foundation is the recent recipient of two endowment-establishing gifts to help Manchester Community College students achieve their educational goals.
Manchester Community College Outcome Measures Summary Early Childhood Education – Associate Degree This document summarizes MCC ECE program outcomes in compliance with NAEYC Accreditation requirements.
FirstShowing.net: Cannes 2016: 'The Cinema Travelers' Doc Profiles a Passion for 35mm
With the conversion to digital cinema nearly complete worldwide, will 35mm still live on somewhere? This documentary is proof that yes, a love for film and 35mm projection will live on forever, even ...
The Media Online: Vodka martini, shaken not stirred: The case for cinema
Cinema remains a high-impact advertising medium post-Covid South African cinema reach requires multi-circuit buying Cinema audiences are young, digital, and ...
The Cinema Guild is a distributor of independent, foreign and documentary films. Some of our recent releases include Agnes Varda’s “The Beach of Agnes,” Maren Ade’s “Everyone Else,” Andrew Bujalski’s ...
JustWatch is the place to discover your next favorite movie or TV show. Whether you’re streaming, buying, or renting movies to watch online, JustWatch gives you access to a huge array of options.
In America growing up in the Midwest, I've always heard people pronounce the word "bury" as if it were pronounced sounding the same as the word "berry". Ever since I've noticed this many years ba...
1 How did the phrase "bury one's head in the sand" meaning "to ignore a bad situation hoping it will disappear" (coming from the misbelief that ostriches do this to hide from predators) end up being part of English? At what time did the idiom and perhaps stereotype enter general knowledge among English speakers?
What is the name of the tactic that politicians use to bury people with ...
In the UK it is called chasing: When running cables or pipes up (or along) a masonry wall, the neatest method is to bury (or, in builders terms, chase) them in the wall surface. (From a DIY site) Although this meaning doesn't appear in dictionaries I have checked, it probably derives from: chase2: Engrave (metal, or a design on metal) Edit: Just noticed that Merriam-Webster has this definition ...
The spelling of busy (and bury) is the result of dialect mixture. Different Middle English varieties had different outcomes of Old English short /y/. In the East Midlands variety that underlies the standard, it became short /u/ as in blush; in Kent, short /ɛ/ as in merry (for people who pronounce it with the same vowel as in met, anyhow); in the West Midlands, short /i/ as in bridge: all ...
Junior infielder Sarah Thompson has been a staple of the Manchester softball program for three years. A leader on and off the field, Thompson also has incredible speed--when she gets on base, the ...
See places in Street View Zoom in on streets around the world to see images of buildings, cars, and other scenery.