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What’s a catchy phrase that means get the most out of your dollar?
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)“Get out of your own head”How can I rephrase “enough rope to shoot yourself in the foot”?Is “Know how to cook leeks”an idiom? What does “Read “Hamlet” and know how to cook leeks” mean?Idioms and bodyparts: punch your lights out and lightsIs there an English idiom for trying to do two things at the same time and failing at both of them due to splitting your effort?What's the best term for a cognitive state where you can't quite build the components up to achieve the solution?A skill that you have, but has little to no benefit for youWhat does Megyn Kelly “dished about” her battle with sb. and “spilled dirt about” her colleagues mean?Idomatic expression for focusing on means at the cost of the ends?Rebus Ad in London tube: “your closet dreams”?
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I’m trying to finish a speech, and I was thinking of a catchy last idiom to wrap it up. It was on the tip of my tongue and it I think it mean get the most out of your dollar or something like that....
“So next time you hold a dollar in your hand remind yourself , ___(PHRASE______.”
phrase-requests idioms idiom-requests expression-choice
add a comment |
I’m trying to finish a speech, and I was thinking of a catchy last idiom to wrap it up. It was on the tip of my tongue and it I think it mean get the most out of your dollar or something like that....
“So next time you hold a dollar in your hand remind yourself , ___(PHRASE______.”
phrase-requests idioms idiom-requests expression-choice
add a comment |
I’m trying to finish a speech, and I was thinking of a catchy last idiom to wrap it up. It was on the tip of my tongue and it I think it mean get the most out of your dollar or something like that....
“So next time you hold a dollar in your hand remind yourself , ___(PHRASE______.”
phrase-requests idioms idiom-requests expression-choice
I’m trying to finish a speech, and I was thinking of a catchy last idiom to wrap it up. It was on the tip of my tongue and it I think it mean get the most out of your dollar or something like that....
“So next time you hold a dollar in your hand remind yourself , ___(PHRASE______.”
phrase-requests idioms idiom-requests expression-choice
phrase-requests idioms idiom-requests expression-choice
asked 5 hours ago
Sabir AdenSabir Aden
9217
9217
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
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The idiom that immediately comes to my mind is bang for your buck.
From Wikipedia:
Bang for the buck is an idiom meaning the worth of one's money or exertion. The phrase originated from the slang usage of the words "bang" which means "excitement" and "buck" which means "money".1 Variations of the term include "bang for your buck," "bang for one's buck," "more bang for the buck," "bigger bang for the buck," and mixings of these. "More bang for the buck" was preceded by "more bounce to the ounce", an advertising slogan used in 1950 to market the carbonated soft drink Pepsi.
In your example sentence, you might say:
So next time you hold a dollar in your hand, remind yourself to get the most bang for your buck.
little typo there at the end.... bank for your buck?
– Hellion
1 hour ago
@Hellion Ha! Fixed. I'm not sure what Freud would have said.
– Jason Bassford
1 hour ago
Thank you show much guys. Y’all are hw lifesavers
– Sabir Aden
1 hour ago
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
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active
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votes
The idiom that immediately comes to my mind is bang for your buck.
From Wikipedia:
Bang for the buck is an idiom meaning the worth of one's money or exertion. The phrase originated from the slang usage of the words "bang" which means "excitement" and "buck" which means "money".1 Variations of the term include "bang for your buck," "bang for one's buck," "more bang for the buck," "bigger bang for the buck," and mixings of these. "More bang for the buck" was preceded by "more bounce to the ounce", an advertising slogan used in 1950 to market the carbonated soft drink Pepsi.
In your example sentence, you might say:
So next time you hold a dollar in your hand, remind yourself to get the most bang for your buck.
little typo there at the end.... bank for your buck?
– Hellion
1 hour ago
@Hellion Ha! Fixed. I'm not sure what Freud would have said.
– Jason Bassford
1 hour ago
Thank you show much guys. Y’all are hw lifesavers
– Sabir Aden
1 hour ago
add a comment |
The idiom that immediately comes to my mind is bang for your buck.
From Wikipedia:
Bang for the buck is an idiom meaning the worth of one's money or exertion. The phrase originated from the slang usage of the words "bang" which means "excitement" and "buck" which means "money".1 Variations of the term include "bang for your buck," "bang for one's buck," "more bang for the buck," "bigger bang for the buck," and mixings of these. "More bang for the buck" was preceded by "more bounce to the ounce", an advertising slogan used in 1950 to market the carbonated soft drink Pepsi.
In your example sentence, you might say:
So next time you hold a dollar in your hand, remind yourself to get the most bang for your buck.
little typo there at the end.... bank for your buck?
– Hellion
1 hour ago
@Hellion Ha! Fixed. I'm not sure what Freud would have said.
– Jason Bassford
1 hour ago
Thank you show much guys. Y’all are hw lifesavers
– Sabir Aden
1 hour ago
add a comment |
The idiom that immediately comes to my mind is bang for your buck.
From Wikipedia:
Bang for the buck is an idiom meaning the worth of one's money or exertion. The phrase originated from the slang usage of the words "bang" which means "excitement" and "buck" which means "money".1 Variations of the term include "bang for your buck," "bang for one's buck," "more bang for the buck," "bigger bang for the buck," and mixings of these. "More bang for the buck" was preceded by "more bounce to the ounce", an advertising slogan used in 1950 to market the carbonated soft drink Pepsi.
In your example sentence, you might say:
So next time you hold a dollar in your hand, remind yourself to get the most bang for your buck.
The idiom that immediately comes to my mind is bang for your buck.
From Wikipedia:
Bang for the buck is an idiom meaning the worth of one's money or exertion. The phrase originated from the slang usage of the words "bang" which means "excitement" and "buck" which means "money".1 Variations of the term include "bang for your buck," "bang for one's buck," "more bang for the buck," "bigger bang for the buck," and mixings of these. "More bang for the buck" was preceded by "more bounce to the ounce", an advertising slogan used in 1950 to market the carbonated soft drink Pepsi.
In your example sentence, you might say:
So next time you hold a dollar in your hand, remind yourself to get the most bang for your buck.
edited 1 hour ago
answered 2 hours ago
Jason BassfordJason Bassford
21k32750
21k32750
little typo there at the end.... bank for your buck?
– Hellion
1 hour ago
@Hellion Ha! Fixed. I'm not sure what Freud would have said.
– Jason Bassford
1 hour ago
Thank you show much guys. Y’all are hw lifesavers
– Sabir Aden
1 hour ago
add a comment |
little typo there at the end.... bank for your buck?
– Hellion
1 hour ago
@Hellion Ha! Fixed. I'm not sure what Freud would have said.
– Jason Bassford
1 hour ago
Thank you show much guys. Y’all are hw lifesavers
– Sabir Aden
1 hour ago
little typo there at the end.... bank for your buck?
– Hellion
1 hour ago
little typo there at the end.... bank for your buck?
– Hellion
1 hour ago
@Hellion Ha! Fixed. I'm not sure what Freud would have said.
– Jason Bassford
1 hour ago
@Hellion Ha! Fixed. I'm not sure what Freud would have said.
– Jason Bassford
1 hour ago
Thank you show much guys. Y’all are hw lifesavers
– Sabir Aden
1 hour ago
Thank you show much guys. Y’all are hw lifesavers
– Sabir Aden
1 hour ago
add a comment |
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