pray tell

For demanding an answer. In my opinion, it adds a friendly layer of irony, indicating that you cannot see a possible reason for something :

And pray tell, what purpose does it serve? 🙄

Half Sisyphus, half rolling stone.

Describes self sabotaging tendencies (while showing good will and effort).

I thought you quit smoking last month – yea, half Sisyphus, half rolling stone🥲

  • Maerman@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Much of a muchness.

    Used to describe something redundant or superfluous. Naming a cat is much of a muchness; it won’t come when you call it anyway.

    That’s not how you play cricket.

    Used when someone or something is obviously bending or breaking the rules in an ungentlemanly manner. Capitalism is not how you play cricket.

    • scubbo@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      “not how you play cricket”

      I (native UK English speaker)'ve only ever heard it with “cricket” in an adjectival form. As in “that’s just not cricket”.