be in sackcloth and ashes Idioma
ashes
cannabis
Dine on ashes
I someone is dining on ashes he or she is excessively focusing attention on failures or regrets for past actions.
One hand washes the other
This idiom means that we need other people to get on as cooperation benefits us all.
Reduce to ashes
If something is reduced to ashes, it is destroyed or made useless. His infidelities reduced their relationship to ashes.
Rise from the ashes
If something rises from the ashes, it recovers after a serious failure.
Wear sackcloth and ashes
If someone displays their grief or contrition publicly, they wear sackcloth and ashes.
rise from the ashes|ash|ashes|rise
v. phr. To rise from ruin; start anew.
A year after flunking out of medical school, Don rose from the ashes and passed his qualifying exams for the M.D. with honors.
sackcloth and ashes
sackcloth and ashes Mourning or penitence, as in
What I did to Julie's child was terrible, and I've been in sackcloth and ashes ever since. This term refers to the ancient Hebrew custom of indicating humility before God by wearing a coarse cloth, normally used to make sacks, and dusting oneself with ashes. In English it appeared in William Tyndale's 1526 biblical translations (Matthew 11:21), “They [the cities Tyre and Sidon] had repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes.”
be in sackcloth and ashes
To behave in a way that shows one's anguish or anguish for one's misdeeds or poor behavior. Darren has been in sackcloth and ashes anytime back his adherent bankrupt up with him for cheating on her. The above CEO is spending his canicule on a clandestine island. He's hardly in sackcloth and ashes afterwards ambidexterity barter out of millions of dollars, is he?Learn more: and, ash, sackclothsackcloth and ashes, to be in
To be abject or contrite; in a accompaniment of repentance. This appellation alludes to the age-old Hebrew custom of donning a coarse, aphotic bolt from which sacks were fabricated and blanket oneself with ashes to announce one’s abasement afore God. It is mentioned in the Bible: “And I set my face unto the Lord God, to seek by adoration and supplications, with fasting, and sackcloth, and ashes” (Daniel 9:3). The appellation may be obsolescent. Learn more: and, sackcloth, to
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