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Dan
Everything is a pea with you
Hello,
If one says sarcastically that 'you are the princess and the pea', what would it mean?
The next followed is "everything is a pea with you". I have no idea on how to understand these.
Thank you for your answer in advance.
Dan
May 2, 2019 4:14 AM
Answers · 3
3
It's a reference to an old fairy tale. The idea is that the princess in the story is so delicate/sensitive that she can feel a pea under the mattress of her bed, and keeps complaining about it.
So, saying that suggests that the person is very sensitive, or delicate, or perhaps that they complain a lot about little things.
May 2, 2019
1
The first one is a reference to an old and famous English fairy-tale. It's about a girl who was very, very sensitive because she was a princess. the princess symbolizes very sensitive and somewhat hard-to-be-around people.
Pea, here, symbolizes a small thing that would not irritate, upset, or annoy a normal person. But a person with a princess complex would feel this "pea" and complain to everyone about it.
He probably meant that you complain about every little thing that would not irritate a less sensitive person.
May 2, 2019
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Dan
Language Skills
English, Korean
Learning Language
English
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