+1 I love the idea of pita pockets but they fall in a grouping of goods I have to think too much about to use. I did make a pizza pita pocket gor my kids to eat after sports when they were younger, with pepperoni, some mozzarella and a little pizza sauce. But now that they are older, Chipotle style wraps sre more filling. |
Have you ever eaten *any* food in a car? Ok. Then use your big beautiful brain to imagine that the food you ate was something one might eat for dinner. Voila! You have imagined eating dinner in a car! |
Let me guess, MCPS education? |
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Omg. Do some of you have an answer for op or are you here to argue?
Op I haven't found any that work as I expect them to. Plus, I can't fold them worth crap. Wraps might be easier, although still messy. Damn, now I want a pita! |
You are absolutely wrong. Those are all hyperboles and can easily be looked up to verify. Hyperboles are exaggerations not to be taken literally Idioms are phrases that cannot be understood with separate words, but has meaning nonetheless. Eating humble pie. Piece of cake. Look it up easily. You’ll be embarrassed. |
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If you heat them they puff up and it makes it easier to find the pocket.
But I still wouldn’t do in the car. I sometimes make a slightly healthier version of Emeril’s breakfast casserole for dinner — that’s a great car dinner because it’s all baked in there together and it’s not crumbly or saucy. I think quiche would also work well. Maybe empanadas but those are kind of saucy so could be a mess. |
We don’t have to guess. You have no education. |
“Raining cats and dogs” is used as an example in the dictionary definition of idiom. |
No they are not. You’re confusing the two. -They are hyperboles. Look up Socratic.org -dp |
One out of the bunch may be an idiom. The others definitely are not as you incorrectly stated. |
“Cost an arm and a leg” and “so hungry I could eat a horse” are also both idioms. |
No there are not. |
If that’s the case, then there is not such thing as a hyperbole. The I’m so hungry, I can eat a horse is always used as an example when teaching hyperboles. You are confusing the two types of speech. |
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/cost-an-arm-and-a-leg-a-small-fortune?q=cost+an+arm+and+a+leg%2Fa+small+fortune https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/i-m-so-hungry-i-could-eat-a-horse?q=so+hungry+I+could+eat+a+horse |
Not the OP but that breakfast casserole sounds perfect. I make this recipe for empanadas but use ham or bacon instead of chorizo and use the premade empanada dough in the freezer section. So portable. https://handletheheat.com/breakfast-empanadas/ |