Monday, October 13, 2008

I didn't really understand certain phrases that they used like...

"dime a dozen" on page 132
"cover" page 60
"broke the mold" page 66
"lick the world" page 64
"counting your chickens" page 63

(I have the book from the school book fair.)

3 comments:

Arjun Puranik said...

dime a dozen: like they're cheap, common people. nothing special like Willy wants to think
cover: compensate for leaving by getting people to "cover" for him. (it explains it a few lines later)
broke the mold: changed the normal stereotype
lick the world: beat the world, like win against everyone and make it big I guess
counting your chickens: ...before they hatch

Dan Szmurlo said...

When Happy says "they broke the mold when they made her," he's talking about Linda's undying comittement to Willy, and how Linda is unnormal in that way.

Kaitlin Fanning said...

for the "counting your chickens" its referring to the common metaphor: dont count your chickens before they've hatched meaning dont assume/count on something happening before it's happened.