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Mr. Tom Posted 7 years ago
Vocabulary

Idioms: all in a day's work vs. par for the course

Hi

Would you say that these two idioms are essentially synonymous?

When you are a nurse, cleaning up vomit is all in a day's work.

When you are a nurse, cleaning up vomit is par for the course.

Thanks,

Tom

  

Top answer

I would say that they are very similar in meaning. However, I would use them in a slightly different way. For a nurse, cleaning up vomit is all in a day's work --I would use this phrase to indicate that the nurse is taking the task in stride (not making a big deal of it).

  • I would say that they are very similar in meaning.
  • However, I would use them in a slightly different way.
  • For a nurse, cleaning up vomit is all in a day's work --I would use this phrase to indicate that the nurse is taking the task in stride (not making a big deal of it).
  • So the emphasis is on the attitude of the nurse.
  • For a nurse, cleaning up vomit is par for the course --I would use this phrase to indicate that cleaning up vomit is to be expected as part of the job of nursing.
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1 Answers
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I would say that they are very similar in meaning. However, I would use them in a slightly different way.

For a nurse, cleaning up vomit is all in a day's work--I would use this phrase to indicate that the nurse is taking the task in stride (not making a big deal of it). So the emphasis is on the attitude of the nurse.

For a nurse, cleaning up vomit is par for the co

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