Baboon
What does "get something in someone" in this sentence mean? I figured I’d better get a decent meal in him before he starts to waste away. Thank you
23 janv. 2024 20:20
Réponses · 2
1
True. I have also heard people (usually someone’s mom, I think :) say something like, “You need to get some food into you before you start your busy day…”
24 janvier 2024
1
It's an idiom for getting someone something to eat. Oddly, the idiom is actually a literal description of what will happen: food will go inside the person. But that's not how we normally talk about eating. The sentence means something like, "I thought I should get him something filling to eat ('decent meal') because he is so thin and weak that he looks like he might die soon."
23 janvier 2024
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