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Usenet Posted 21 years ago
English in UK

Help on "come to a fine pass"

Hi, all!
I am a non-English speaker who is trying hard to learn English. I want to know this phrase "come to a fine pass" and I need you help since I can't find it in my dictionary. Here are two examples I copied from the searching results of Google.
1.¡°Things are come to a fine pass when one sister invites the other to herhouse
o¡¯ purpose to quarrel with her and abuse her.¡±
2.So the old man called the young folks away from the pear-tree and wentgrumbling
on, saying, that the world was come to a fine pass, indeed, when such as they
set up for religion.
3. "This is a fine pass you've come to."

Could you help me please? Thanks a lot!
Best regards,
BCBD
  

Top answer

[nq:1]Hi, all! I am a non-English speaker who is trying hard to learn English. I want to know this phrase ...

  • [nq:1]Hi, all!
  • I am a non-English speaker who is trying hard to learn English.
  • I want to know this phrase ...
  • up for religion.
  • 3.
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11 Answers
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[nq:1]Hi, all! I am a non-English speaker who is trying hard to learn English. I want to know this phrase ... up for religion. 3. "This is a fine pass you've come to." Could you help me please? Thanks a lot![/nq]
What's the question ;-)
It means a similar thing to "a sorry state of affairs". So in the first phrase you could have "It's a sorry state of affairs when one sister....". Its an e
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[nq:1]Hi, all! I am a non-English speaker who is trying hard to learn English. I want to know this phrase ... 3. "This is a fine pass you've come to." Could you help me please? Thanks a lot! Best regards, BCBD[/nq]
It's not used too frequently these days, I'd think. It is also expressed as "Things have come to a pretty pass when ....(insert grumble)"
It just means, 'What are things coming
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Thank you, John of Aix!
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[nq:1]Thank you, John of Aix![/nq]
You're welcome, we're here for that.
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[nq:1]It means a similar thing to "a sorry state of affairs". So in the first phrase you could have "It's ... and what the sense of the thig really is. I don't know where this turn of phrase comes from though.[/nq]
I wonder if it's a jocular distortion of the Biblical "it came to pass"(?)

Phil C.
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[nq:2]Thank you, John of Aix![/nq]
[nq:1]You're welcome, we're here for that.[/nq]
Speak for yourself. I am here to make snide remarks and juvenile comments about spelling mistakes.
Giles

It's a tough job, but someone has to do it.
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[nq:2]You're welcome, we're here for that.[/nq]
[nq:1]Speak for yourself. I am here to make snide remarks and juvenile comments about spelling mistakes.[/nq]
Well that too obviously, Usenet is Usenet after all.

Any idea where 'come to a fine/pretty pass' comes form Giles, erudite fellow that you are? Sounds liek Shalespeare to me (always a good guess if in doubt).
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[nq:2]Speak for yourself. I am here to make snide remarks and juvenile comments about spelling mistakes.[/nq]
[nq:1]Well that too obviously, Usenet is Usenet after all. Any idea where 'come to a fine/pretty pass' comes form Giles, erudite fellow that you are? Sounds liek Shalespeare to me (always a good guess if in doubt).[/nq]
Kind of you to give him a couple of opportunities for juvenile
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[nq:1]Any idea where 'come to a fine/pretty pass' comes form Giles, erudite fellow that you are? Sounds liek Shalespeare to me (always a good guess if in doubt).[/nq]
Here you go:
7. a. A position or situation in the course of any affair; esp. aposition, qualified in some way; a critical position, a juncture, a predicament. Also phr. (to come to) a pretty pass, (to reach) a regrettable sta
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[nq:1]Any idea where 'come to a fine/pretty pass' comes form Giles, erudite fellow that you are? Sounds liek Shalespeare to me (always a good guess if in doubt).[/nq]
In my opinion, we've come to a pretty pass now that the Trough of Bowland has been made access land.
Paul Burke

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