answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

Here's an extensive list of common phrases that involve numbers: the Three Stooges, Goldie Locks and the Three Bears, The Tale of the Three Blind Mice, the Three Little Bears, the Three Little Pigs, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Three's Company (all movies), two heads are better than one, 3's a crowd, I'm available 24/7, 365, there are 24 hours in a week, seven days in a week, and 365 days in a year, a bird in the hand is worth more than two in the bush, third time's a charm, seven wives for seven brothers, do the two-step, two mints in one, three strikes and you're out, one step forward, two steps back, two (or three) peas in a pod, six bottles to a pack (reference to alcohol), twelve cans to a pack (reference to soda), you can't rub two nickels together, it takes two, one for you and two for me, to kill two birds with one stone, all for one and one for all, the Three Musketeers, mom, dad, and baby makes 3 (old saying), table for two, two-a-days, 1 a day (reference to the vitamin brand), Three Days Grace (band), Five for Fighting (band), two-toned complexion, the one-and-only, three wishes, the three Wise Men, there are four seasons, four-wheelers, 3 Six Mafia (band), the Three Chipmunks, there are nine planets (technically eight thanks to astronomy scientists who studied Pluto, the "Dwarf Star", much less a small planet, so they say), the Ten Commandments, 9 Inch Nails (band), Fantastic Four, a person has ten fingers and ten toes, thus giving them a total of twenty moveable projectiles (tried to make that phrase sound not so awkward but realistic), one is the lonliest number (an old song lyric), When I'm 64 (song), February has 28 days, 30 days hath September, and all the rest have 31 (or a similar saying), two's company, three's a crowd, fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me, the "This Old Man" song, cats have nine lives, all animals have two eyes, two ears, one nose, and one mouth, the song "99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall", lucky seven, sweet sixteen, three-pointer, third wheel, there are 52 weeks in a year, and 12 months in a year, one way, two-way street, one love (also a Bob Marley song ["One Love"]), baker's dozen, the "Twelve Days of Christmas"song, the five senses, the Sixth Sense (movie), seven digits, Fourth of July, behind the eight ball, two points, there are four pecks in a bushel, two-timer, six-pack, million dollar baby, four-eyes (reference to someone who wears glasses), four-leaf clover, forty days and forty nights, Six Days, Seven Nights(movie), Newton's Three Laws of Motion, the Wiccan Rule of Three, three-bean salad, "the three Wise Men who visited Jesus after his birth left him three gifts", Jesus was born on the 25th of December, the old saying that I'm sure everyone's mother has told them at one time or another "three leaves, let it be" (reminder of what might be poison ivy, as well as poison oak, sumac or dogwood), one foot right after the other, one way or another, "One Step at a Time" (song), one in a million, if I had one wish, we're number one, "why was six afraid of seven? because seven eight (ate) nine!", a picture is worth a thousand words, I don't want to be a fifth wheel, a stitch in time saves nine, two wrongs don't make a right, two negatives make a positive, two's company, knock three times, the Three Amigos (movie), triple crown, three's the magic number, triple double (a term used in Basketball), the Three Kings (also a movie [the Three Kings]), and count your blessings one at a time.

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What common phrases that are related to numbers?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp