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  1. 25 sept. 2014 · It is a reverse-order sentence. The subject of the sentence is breakfast, which is singular and therefore the verb should also be singular. There is no significant difference in meaning between "bread and butter is my breakfast" and "my breakfast is bread and butter." Writers often use reverse-order sentences to liven up their prose - nothing ...

  2. Then I assume you are talking about bread that has butter on it. (For example, "Bread and butter is essential when eating a big bowl of spicy soup.") If you say. Bread and butter are essential. Then i assume you are talking about bread by itself, plus butter by itself. (For example, "Bread and butter are essential for any kitchen.")

  3. 10 mai 2018 · 1. Please ask one question per post, to avoid confusion. For your "bread-and-butter" question: In English, this would be "bread and butter" regardless of whether it was spread or not. It can also be used colloquially to mean someone's primary skill area or regular source of income. "Cleaning watches was his bread and butter."

  4. Since it is a metaphor, "bread and butter" is comprised of smaller, everyday words, and might be considered as less formal. Also, since it is dated (but not incorrect), it could be misunderstood by a younger examiner. A better phrase might be: core competency. a defining capability or advantage that distinguishes an enterprise from its competitors.

  5. 8 janv. 2014 · Bread and Butter (superstition) "Bread and butter" is a superstitious blessing or charm, typically said by young couples or friends walking together when they are forced to separate by an obstacle, such as a pole or another person. By saying the phrase, the bad luck of letting something come between them is thought to be averted. Both walkers ...

  6. 26 avr. 2019 · To want one's bread buttered on both sides is a mainly British English idiom meaning to want to benefit or profit from two opposite or contradictory things, or to want to achieve or gain something without payment or effort, e.g. "Young people these days want their bread buttered on both sides - they want high paying jobs, but they aren't prepared to work for them!"

  7. 20 avr. 2020 · 4. Bread in most English speaking countries is formed in loaves. And here you see why bread is uncountable. There is another word that means the countable equivalent: loaf/loaves. In Iran, much bread is flatbread, and so not in loaf form. It is not surprising that the equivalent word is countable if "bread" means "naan".

  8. 9 août 2023 · He broke into the empty house and went back to the kitchen. He reached into the fridge and took out a tub of butter, setting it on the kitchen counter. He put a slice of bread in the toaster. When the bread popped up, he skimmed a curl of butter from the tub and spread it across the surface, trying not to crush the toast. He wondered how so ...

  9. 8 déc. 2013 · 6. The association of parsnips with butter is of long standing. Fletcher alluded to it in his play ‘Womans Prize’ in 1625. The OED’s earliest citation for the acttual proverb is this from 1639: ‘Faire words butter noe parsnips, verba non alunt familiam.’. Share. Improve this answer.

  10. 10 mai 2013 · English: Butter, bread, and green cheese is good English and good Fries. The poem is pronounced about the same in either language.... [But] though there are similarities, especially in grammar, English and Frisian speakers generally can't understand each other, which makes them separate languages.

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