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WINGED WORDS, PHRASEOLOGICAL UNITS
Directory / Winged words, phraseological units / Who dares to say: goodbye through the abyss of two or three days?

Winged words, phraseologism. Meaning, history of origin, examples of use

Winged words, phraseological units

Directory / Winged words, phraseological units

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Who dares to say: goodbye through the abyss of two or three days?

Tyutchev F.I.
Tyutchev F.I.

Phraseologism: Who dares to say: goodbye through the abyss of two or three days?

Meaning: All plans that a person builds are conditional, because any accident, unpredictability of the next hour of human life can cancel all forecasts and calculations in an instant.

Origin: From the quatrain "Alas, that our ignorance ..." (1854, publ. 1868) by Fyodor Ivanovich Tyutchev (1803-1873): "Alas, that our ignorance // And more helpless and sadder? // Who dares to say: goodbye / / Through the abyss of two or three days?" Quoted as a warning against "guessing" something for the future.

Random phraseology:

We call this moan a song.

Meaning:

About someone's inept, annoying singing (jokingly ironic).

Origin:

From the poem "Reflections at the front entrance" (1858) by I. A. Nekrasov (1921-1877): "Come out to the Volga: whose groan is heard // Over the great Russian river? // This groan is called a song by us - // That is barge haulers go tow! .. "

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