- all there
- в своем уме
Ever since he suffered that injury to his head, he has not been quite all there.
Idioms and examples. 2014.
Ever since he suffered that injury to his head, he has not been quite all there.
Idioms and examples. 2014.
all there — or[all here] {adj. phr.}, {informal} Understanding well; thinking clearly; not crazy. Usually used in negative sentences, * /Joe acted queerly and talked wildly, so we thought he was not all there./ … Dictionary of American idioms
all there — or[all here] {adj. phr.}, {informal} Understanding well; thinking clearly; not crazy. Usually used in negative sentences, * /Joe acted queerly and talked wildly, so we thought he was not all there./ … Dictionary of American idioms
not all there — {adj. phr.} Not completely alert mentally; absentminded; not together. * /Bill is a wonderful guy but he is just not all there./ … Dictionary of American idioms
not all there — {adj. phr.} Not completely alert mentally; absentminded; not together. * /Bill is a wonderful guy but he is just not all there./ … Dictionary of American idioms
All You Zombies— — For the song by The Hooters, see All You Zombies Infobox short story | name = All You Zombies title orig = translator = author = Robert A. Heinlein country = flagicon|USA United States language = English series = genre = Science fiction published … Wikipedia
there — I. adverb Etymology: Middle English, from Old English thǣr; akin to Old High German dār there, Old English thæt that Date: before 12th century 1. in or at that place < stand over there > often used interjectionally 2. to or into that place ;… … New Collegiate Dictionary
there — See: ALL THERE, HERE AND THERE, NEITHER HERE NOR THERE, THEN AND THERE … Dictionary of American idioms
there — See: ALL THERE, HERE AND THERE, NEITHER HERE NOR THERE, THEN AND THERE … Dictionary of American idioms
all here — See: ALL THERE … Dictionary of American idioms
all here — See: ALL THERE … Dictionary of American idioms
All My Trials — was a folk song during the social protest movements of the 1950s and 1960s. It is based on a Bahamian lullaby that tells the story of a mother on her death bed, comforting her children, Hush little baby, don t you cry./You know your mama s bound… … Wikipedia