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  1. Hace 5 días · Mind your Ps and Qs is our phrase in The English We Speak. If someone tells you to mind your Ps and Qs, they’re telling you to be polite in a social situation, and to be careful about...

  2. 23 de may. de 2024 · The phrase “mind your P's and Q's” is often used to remind people to be careful, and to remain on their best behavior. It appears to have emerged around the 1600s, and the exact origins are actually a bit murky. There are a number of theories to explain the roots of the idiom, although these theories are of varying levels of believability.

  3. 23 de may. de 2024 · Mind your Ps and Qs can mean to be careful, vigilant, or, more often, polite. For example, a mother might mention that Aunt Gertrude is a stickler for manners and the children had better mind their Ps and Qs when she visits. There are several suggested origins for the phrase, which often differ from the way it is now used.

  4. Hace 2 días · Mind your Ps and Qs. Episode 191209 / 09 Dec 2019 Don’t forget these letters at an important meeting. completed. Dad dancing. Episode 191202 / 24 Oct 2019 Swing those ...

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  5. Hace 4 días · Definition. Entries Near. Show more. Save Word. watch one's p's and q's. idiom. US. : to be careful about behaving in a polite or proper way. We knew to watch our p's and q's around our aunt. Dictionary Entries Near watch one's p's and q's. watch one's mouth. watch one's p's and q's. watch one's tongue. See More Nearby Entries. Cite this Entry.

  6. Hace 3 días · Ps and qs; Pyrrhic victory; Rain check; Raining cats and dogs; Reap what you sow; Red in tooth and claw; Rest assured; Riled up; Rock the boat; Rooting for you; Round robin; Rule of thumb; Salad days; Sally port; Sea change; Second to none; Seize the day; Shave and a haircut; Shed some light; Shit from shinola; Short end of the stick ...

  7. 7 de may. de 2024 · List of useful business phrases and idioms about jobs in English: Learn the Ropes: Become more familiar with a job or field of endeavor; be trained. Get the Sack, Be Sacked: To be fired. Off the Hook: Free from blame or responsibility to do something. Hanging by a Thread: In great danger of elimination or failure.