you cannot eat your cake and have it
- you cannot eat your cake and have it
syn: a man cannot spin and reel at the same time
one cannot blow and swallow at the same time
you cannot flay the same ox twice
you can't dance at two weddings with one pair of feet
один пиріг двічі не ідять
≅ з вола дві шкури не деруть
з однієї липи двічі лика не деруть
винного двома батогами не б'ють
на двох весіллях зразу не танцюють
English-Ukrainian dictionary of proverbs .
2013.
Look at other dictionaries:
you cannot eat your cake and have it — you cannot get everything you want, it is not possible to achieve every dream you may have … English contemporary dictionary
you cannot have your cake and eat it — You cannot consume or spend something and still keep possession of it: once the cake is eaten, it is gone. The positions of have and eat are often reversed. 1546 J. HEYWOOD Dialogue of Proverbs II. ix. L2 I trowe ye raue, Wolde ye bothe eate your … Proverbs new dictionary
have your cake and eat it — phrase to have all the benefits of a situation when, in fact, having one thing means that you cannot have the other He wants to stay with his wife but still see his girlfriend – talk about having your cake and eating it! Thesaurus: to be in a… … Useful english dictionary
have your cake and eat it — to have all the benefits of a situation when, in fact, having one thing means that you cannot have the other He wants to stay with his wife but still see his girlfriend – talk about having your cake and eating it! … English dictionary
eat — W1S1 [i:t] v past tense ate [et, eıt US eıt] past participle eaten [ˈi:tn] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(food)¦ 2¦(meal)¦ 3 eat your words 4 eat your heart out 5 eat somebody alive/eat somebody for breakfast 6¦(use)¦ 7 eat humble pie … Dictionary of contemporary English
have — [ weak əv, həv, strong hæv ] (3rd person singular has [ weak əz, həz, strong hæz ] ; past tense and past participle had [ weak əd, həd, strong hæd ] ) verb *** Have can be used in the following ways: as an auxiliary verb in perfect tenses of… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
cake — [ keık ] noun *** 1. ) count or uncount a sweet food made by baking a mixture that usually contains sugar, eggs, flour, and butter or oil: a chocolate cake a birthday/wedding/Christmas cake a piece/slice of cake: Would you like a slice of cake?… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
cake — 1 /keIk/ noun 1 (C, U) a soft sweet food made by baking a mixture of flour, fat, sugar and eggs: a birthday cake | Would you like a slice of chocolate cake? compare biscuit 2 fish cake/rice cake etc fish, rice etc that has been formed into a flat … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
eat — see you are what you eat we must eat a peck of dirt before we die eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we die he that would eat the fruit must climb the tree eat to live, not live to eat the cat would eat fish, b … Proverbs new dictionary
have — see what you have, hold you cannot have your cake and eat it the more you get, the more you want nothing venture, nothing have what you spend, you have you can have too much of a good thing … Proverbs new dictionary
cake — see you cannot have your cake and eat it … Proverbs new dictionary