What are you implying?; What do you mean? (Informal.) • What are you driving at? What are you trying to say? • Why are you asking me all these questions? What are you driving at?
What's your take on that?
This idiom is way of asking someone for their opinion and ideas.
You what?
This is a very colloquial way of expressing surprise or disbelief at something you have heard. It can also be used to ask someone to say something again.
how about that?
how about that? Isn't that surprising, remarkable, or pleasing. For example, They're engaged—how about that? [Colloquial; first half of 1900s]
or what?
or what? A phrase following a statement that adds emphasis or suggests an option. For example, in Is this a good movie or what? the phrase asks for confirmation or agreement. However, it also may ask for an alternative, as in Is this book a biography or what? In the 1700s it generally asked for a choice among a series of options, and it still has this function, as in In what does John excel? in imagination? in reasoning powers? in mathematics? or what?
What is (someone) arena at?
What is someone's calendar or ambiguous motive? Why is addition accomplishing this? I can't amount out why Janet is aback volunteering for a job she said she would never do. What's she arena at?What are you arena at aggravating to go on a date with my sister?Learn more: play, what
what’s somebody ˈplaying at?
acclimated to ask in an affronted way about what somebody is doing: What do you anticipate you’re arena at?Learn more: play, somebodyLearn more:
An what's somebody playing at? idiom dictionary is a great resource for writers, students, and anyone looking to expand their vocabulary. It contains a list of words with similar meanings with what's somebody playing at?, allowing users to choose the best word for their specific context.
類似の言葉の辞書、別の表現、同義語、イディオム イディオム what's somebody playing at?