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“Can You Score A 15/26 By Matching The Saying To Its Real Definition?”: Challenge Yourself

“Can You Score A 15/26 By Matching The Saying To Its Real Definition?”: Challenge Yourself

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Every culture has its own rich collection of idiomatic expressions and sayings. 🗣️🌍

Try to remember one – it probably doesn’t make sense when translated, right? That’s what these questions are all about: we give you a saying translated into English, and you have to guess what its real meaning is. Are you up for the challenge?

There are 23 questions for you to answer – and to laugh in the meantime. You are about to discover some quirky and funny sayings from around the world. Let’s dive in and see how well you can decode them!

RELATED:
    Woman concentrating on papers, appearing puzzled, related to language mastery and translation challenge.

    Image credits: Nataliya Vaitkevich

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    Trivia Guess The Meaning Of The Translated Saying

    1. What does it mean if someone says, “something is giving off the taste of zucchinis”?

    Something is being bland or uninteresting

    That topic is full of surprises

    You are taking credit for someone else's work

    Something you are always updated

    2. Your friend tells you that someone is "hanging pasta on your ears." Should you…?

    Get ready for dinner, it's pasta today

    Cover your ears - they are talking nonsense

    Be cautious, they might be lying to you

    Stop wasting time on unnecessary things

    3. In which situation would you use the saying, "he who goes slowly goes safely and goes far" from the Italian "chi va piano, va sano e va lontano"?

    When a person is driving fast down a highway

    When a person rushes to finish a project at the last minute

    When someone is working non-stop without breaks

    When telling someone to take small steps to complete a long task

    4. In Japanese, if someone says there is a "little fish grinding their teeth," what they mean is:

    Someone is pretending to be stronger than they really are

    Someone is doing something that won't have an outcome

    Someone is making noise but not being aware

    Someone is being ungrateful

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    5. In Portuguese, when you are told to "get the little horse out of the rain", it means:

    Go get groceries as soon as possible

    Put everything in the house, the rain is coming

    Stop hoping for something that won't happen

    Take care of all animals that come to you

    6. If you hear “to buy a cat in a sack”, you know it stands for:

    Purchasing something without knowing its true value

    Being caring to animals

    Bargaining when shopping

    To buy in bulk, it will be needed

    7. If someone says “you came in like an elephant in a porcelain shop", what do they really mean?

    You have expensive taste

    You are standing out in a crowd

    You are handling things with great care

    You are being clumsy

    8. The saying “to peel the pineapple” means:

    To always be involved in everything

    To deal with a difficult situation

    To be chosen to do a task everyone wants

    To go get pineapples

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    9. In Turkish, if someone comments on you “being parsley”, it means you are:

    Being super healthy and active

    The first choice and the best

    Unnecessarily inserting yourself into a conversation

    Smelling so good that everyone wants to be around you

    10. The saying “not my circus, not my monkeys” means:

    I don't want to do that task

    It’s not my problem

    I want to create a circus

    I want to go and see monkeys

    11. “The donkey called the rooster big-headed” is used in a context where:

    A person is bragging about their achievements in front of others

    Two animals are having an argument about who is smarter

    A person is complimenting another for their intelligence

    Someone is criticizing or mocking another person for a trait they themselves possess

    12. When someone says they are "taking their heart in their teeth", they are being:

    Stressed out about something

    Brave and overcoming fear

    Overconfident and careless

    Angry and ready to fight

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    13. What does “the habit doesn't make the monk” mean?

    People are defined by the clothes they wear

    Monks are always, always honest

    Always follow the rules of the group

    Appearances can be misleading

    14. If someone says “call the child by its name", what do they really mean?

    To not be disrespectful to their child

    To be more attentive to what is being said

    To be clear and direct in addressing an issue

    To babysit their kid

    15. The saying "to cut a mushroom" means:

    To be perfect at cutting food

    To talk nonsense or mess things up

    To be obsessed with cooking

    To be detail-oriented

    16. The saying “don't look a gift horse in the mouth" is intended to mean:

    Always be aware of horses when near them

    You have to give a gift to a horse owner

    You loved the gift you received

    Be grateful for gifts, don't criticize them

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    17. The saying "cannot see woods behind the trees” means:

    To focus too much on the bigger picture

    To be very oblivious

    To not be able to find a solution

    To go to the woods and hide

    18. What is the meaning behind "the rain of May makes the wheat of next year"?

    Nature dictates your level of success

    You need to act quickly to achieve success

    Hard work today will pay off in the future

    Success is only for the lucky ones

    19. What lesson does the saying "if it’s not broken, don't fix it" teach?

    Always push yourself to improve things, no matter how they are working

    Don't try to change something that is working well

    Be cautious when trying something new, it may break

    Fix problems is more important than avoiding them

    20. If someone "throws the house out of the window", what are they doing?

    Moving abroad in no time

    Getting rid of everything they own

    Making renovations in their house

    Spending a lot of money without thinking

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    21. Which is the sentiment behind "Don't wrap words in cotton"?

    Always be polite and considerate

    Keep secrets instead of telling the truth

    Comfort a friend with gentleness

    Be direct and say things bluntly

    22. In life, "he who doesn't cry doesn't nurse". What does this suggest?

    People should cry in silence

    You have to push yourself to get what you want

    Only kids will get what they want

    Those who complain too much never get what they want

    23. What does the saying "to show the goats" mean?

    To tell a confusing story

    To misbehave and be unreasonable

    To make a situation even worse

    To hide your true intentions

    24. If someone is "jumping from the rooster to the donkey”, what are they doing?

    Avoiding responsibilities

    Travelling without a destination

    Changing topics randomly

    Wasting time on irrelevant things

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    25. If someone says "buttery butter", what are they telling you?

    To spread butter more evenly

    You are going in a loop about the same topic

    It's so warm, it seems you are melting

    To be extra smooth

    26. When someone tells you "break a leg", what do they mean?

    They are advising you to be aware of your leg

    They are wishing you good luck

    They are telling you to warm up

    They are telling you that fortune is coming to you

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    Na Schi
    Community Member
    10 hours ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Funny thing: in German "cannot see woods behind the trees" means exact the opposite - being too lost in the details that one misses the greater picture.

    Apatheist Account2
    Community Member
    9 hours ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    And in English - "can't see the wood for the trees" doesn't mean "oblivious", it means you can't you can't see the whole situation clearly because you're looking too closely at small details, whereas "oblivious" means "not aware of or concerned about what is happening around one". I think "not find a solution" is closer in meaning.

    Load More Replies...
    Virgil Blue
    Community Member
    10 hours ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    "Break a leg" comes from the superstition that it's bad luck to wish the actors in a play good luck when the play starts. Whistling on stage is also bad luck, but for practical reasons, because stage hands used whistle signals to raise and lower pieces of the backdrop. One wrong whistle and you could get a sandbag or prop right on the cranium.

    Apatheist Account2
    Community Member
    9 hours ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It comes from if you break a leg, you'll be in a cast - ie you'll get a job in the play.

    Load More Replies...
    Petra Peitsch
    Community Member
    12 hours ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Guess the nationality of BP staff! I would say: Spanish, French and Lithuanian, mostly.

    Load More Comments
    Na Schi
    Community Member
    10 hours ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Funny thing: in German "cannot see woods behind the trees" means exact the opposite - being too lost in the details that one misses the greater picture.

    Apatheist Account2
    Community Member
    9 hours ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    And in English - "can't see the wood for the trees" doesn't mean "oblivious", it means you can't you can't see the whole situation clearly because you're looking too closely at small details, whereas "oblivious" means "not aware of or concerned about what is happening around one". I think "not find a solution" is closer in meaning.

    Load More Replies...
    Virgil Blue
    Community Member
    10 hours ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    "Break a leg" comes from the superstition that it's bad luck to wish the actors in a play good luck when the play starts. Whistling on stage is also bad luck, but for practical reasons, because stage hands used whistle signals to raise and lower pieces of the backdrop. One wrong whistle and you could get a sandbag or prop right on the cranium.

    Apatheist Account2
    Community Member
    9 hours ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It comes from if you break a leg, you'll be in a cast - ie you'll get a job in the play.

    Load More Replies...
    Petra Peitsch
    Community Member
    12 hours ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Guess the nationality of BP staff! I would say: Spanish, French and Lithuanian, mostly.

    Load More Comments
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