0
Rpsh Posted 13 years ago
Vocabulary

in a manner of speaking

’I saw him, Mr. Butterbur,' said a hobbit;' or leastways I didn't see him, if you take my meaning. He just vanished into thin air, in a manner of speaking.'
'You don't say, Mr. Mugwort!' said the landlord, looking puzzled.
'Yes I do!' replied Mugwort.' And I mean what I say, what's more.'
'There's some mistake somewhere,' said Butterbur, shaking his head. There was too much of that Mr. Underhill to go vanishing into thin air; or into thick air, as is more likely in this room.'

I think this phrase means that in a moment of saying a word ( He vanished) in this dialogue. Am I right? And I feel confound about this sentence suddenly: you don't say. Does it mean shut up?
  

Top answer

"in a manner of speaking" is a set phrase indicating that a statement may not be literally true, or may be expressed in a slightly different way from usual, or something like that. " is a set expression showing the speaker's surprise at something that has been said.

  • "in a manner of speaking" is a set phrase indicating that a statement may not be literally true, or may be expressed in a slightly different way from usual, or something like that.
  • " is a set expression showing the speaker's surprise at something that has been said.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

2 Answers
0
"in a manner of speaking" is a set phrase indicating that a statement may not be literally true, or may be expressed in a slightly different way from usual, or something like that.

"You don't say!" is a set expression showing the speaker's surprise at something that has been said.
0
OK! I get it. It sounds like a dialect in the northern China. Thank you!

Related Questions