a) What is it with you?
b) Where do you come up with that?
a)What kind with you?
b)What kind with that story?
29๐ 9๐
1.Many of the same thing. Ironically, it does not mean many different things.
2.It may also be used as an emphasis for an adjective.
1.There are all kinds of peppers in my sandwitch.
2.Those breasts are all kinds of big!
18๐ 5๐
1. the same or very similar.
2.Twins
3.people or things of the same type or that are similar in character, attitude, etc
4.Very similar individuals or things, as in Patrice and John are two of a kind-they're true hiking enthusiasts. This idiom uses kind in the sense of "a class with common characteristics," a usage dating from about a.d. 1000.
1.Jack and Tom are two of a kind. They're both ambitious. The companies are two of a kind. They both pay their employees badly.
2. Where books are concerned, Tyler and Chloรซ are two of a kind
7๐ 1๐
Payment in kind, where someone pays something in favours ( does something for you)
i want payment in kinda give me a reach around
39๐ 15๐
A day that a typical high school junior enrolled in several AP classes experiences daily. Possibly as a result of an unannounced English paper, a monotonous Chemistry lesson about god knows what, a lecture be the rotund physics teacher, a ridiculous calculus test, the simple presence of a Latin or Spanish class, or most likely, a combination of at least 3 of the above.
Chem Teacher: Let's begin!
Dennis: Ughh, I'm not ready for this, it's just been that kind of day.
Stephen: Don't tell me we have a physics test!
Dan: Yeah that homo laid it on thick today!
Stephen: Well what can you expect, it's just been that kind of day.
Xander: What's that smell!?! (looks at shoe and sees he stepped in dog shit) Figures, it's just been that kind of day.
21๐ 7๐