- well in with somebody
Useful english dictionary. 2012.
Useful english dictionary. 2012.
be well in with somebody — be (well) ˈin with sb idiom (informal) to be (very) friendly with sb, and likely to get an advantage from the friendship Main entry: ↑inidiom … Useful english dictionary
be in with somebody — be (well) ˈin with sb idiom (informal) to be (very) friendly with sb, and likely to get an advantage from the friendship Main entry: ↑inidiom … Useful english dictionary
I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me) — Infobox Single Name = I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me) Artist = Whitney Houston from Album = Whitney B side = Released = May 1987 Format = CD single, cassette single, 7 single, 12 single Recorded = Genre = Dance pop, R B Length = 4:52… … Wikipedia
I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me) — Chartplatzierungen Erklärung der Daten Singles[1] I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me) DE … Deutsch Wikipedia
in with somebody — be (well) ˈin with sb idiom (informal) to be (very) friendly with sb, and likely to get an advantage from the friendship Main entry: ↑inidiom … Useful english dictionary
go down with somebody — ˌgo ˈdown (with sb) derived to be received in a particular way by sb • The suggestion didn t go down very well with her boss. Main entry: ↑goderived … Useful english dictionary
go over with somebody — ˌgo ˈover (with sb) derived (NAmE) to be received in a particular way by sb • The news of her promotion went over well with her colleagues. Main entry: ↑goderived … Useful english dictionary
rub along (with somebody) — ˌrub aˈlong (with sb/together) derived (BrE, informal) (of two people) to live or work together in a friendly enough way • We manage to rub along together fairly well. Main entry: ↑ … Useful english dictionary
well — well1 W1S1 [wel] adv comparative better [ˈbetə US ər] superlative best [best] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(satisfactorily)¦ 2¦(thoroughly)¦ 3¦(a lot)¦ 4 do well 5 as well 6 as well as something/somebody 7 may/might/could well … Dictionary of contemporary English
get off on the right foot (with somebody) — get/start off on the right/wrong ˈfoot (with sb) idiom (informal) to start a relationship well/badly • I seem to have got off on the wrong foot with the new boss. Main entry: ↑footidiom … Useful english dictionary