"Making both ends meet" means to get your bills paid, get food on the table, and make a family run financially even on a limited budget where it isn't immediately apparent where the money for everything will come from. Making ends meet involves planning, budgeting, sitting down with the bills and a checkbook and a pencil, etc.
Yes
apeirogon
Draw a triangle with side lengths of 3, 4, and 5 (of whatever unit you want). Just make sure to connect the ends to meet.
Not too sure what you mean by hp and vp but in general perpendicular lines meet at right angles which is 90 degrees.
the point where two line segments meet
Having enough money to live on.
If you make ends meet, you're making the budget balance - making the "back end" of the month meet up with the "front end" of the money coming in. In short, you're making sure you don't spend beyond your means.
(the idiom suggests that insufficient income can be supplemented in some way) "To make ends meet, he began working more overtime." "During the Depression, his mother did laundry for the church to make ends meet."
Yes he did. Both his mother and father worked, and they just had enough money to make ends meet.
It means, for instance, that if there is a poor family who has barely enough money to survive coming into the house, then they have to go without luxuries to make ends meet. In other words, to be able to pay the bills.
make ends meet to make enough money to pay all your bills I can barely make ends meet is a common phrase meaning i can pay my bills but i have no money left over for spend money
What figure of speech is to make ends meet
to make ends meet means to have enough to survive and no more
"Eeking out a living" means barely managing to survive or make a meager living. It implies a struggle to make ends meet and a difficult financial situation.
Those who cannot manage two square meals a day, their lifestyle is bound to be erratic,shedding sweats from their heads to foot to make both ends meet.
Yes
House party 3