This expression is similar to "what goes around, comes around" and basically means that the consequences of one's evil actions catch up in a negative way. The idea that a wrongful curse comes back to the one who curses as a "bird returns to its nest" dates back to the days of antiquity. However, it wasn't until the 19th Century that Robert Southey wrote that "curses are like a young chicken: they always come home to roost." Since then, the idea of evil men creating returns to their own door has been encapsulated in this expression.
Dude, you keep dealing drugs and you're going to get caught. When the chickens come home to roost, they will take your car, your house, and all your money!
200π 13π
An expression that means that a person is about to pay for their mistakes or bad deeds, similar to "what goes around comes around".
The chickens are coming home to roost, Bobby Boucher. You'll reap the fruit of your selfish ways. You're gonna lose all your fancy foosball games, and you're gonna fail your big exam, because school is THE DEVIL!
118π 17π
To leave somewhere that sucks, usually a party.
Dude, this is lame, lets flog a mega deadly roost.
6π 9π
The idea that your wrongdoings and misdeeds have caught up with you and you must be held accountable. In context this can be applied in the first or third person.
Like my pops Mad Max had said, βThe Chickens had come home to roostβ¦β whatever the fuck that meansβ¦ (J. Belfort, The Wolf of Wall Street
222π 3π
*Looks around at the chickens*
HOLY SHIT! You're right!
14π 57π
(Roo-stuh) A roommate with an untreated mental illness or mood disorder.
Can't get no sleep when you live with a rooste.
A word process, nearly describing the idea and ethic of roosting (a bird's birth). The ethic of a que, is any environment that is involved in it's process.
It looks as if this is a bird-- roosting. Interesting, it seems it has been living here for awhile.. I think this is her way of saying she is que-roosting. We will leave her alone. The other birds in the environment have said this..