0
MrPernickety Posted 17 years ago
Vocabulary

Meaning of "it goes with the turf"

Hi,

I encountered the expression at issue in this context:

Michael: So, what do you say to Americans who worry about the impact that this kind of a crisis could have on their vice president, given your heart disease?

Mr Foley: Well, so far, it's been a set of problems we have to deal with. But it goes with the turf and there's been no impact on my health. I appreciate their thoughts on this.

I can't work out the meaning of "But it goes with the turf". I lean toward "but it was expected", but I'm not so sure. Could you help me out with the meaning, please?

Thanks in advance !
  

Top answer

You're very close. It's something that comes along with whatever else you're talking about. If you accept one thing, you accept the things -- even the negative things -- that come with it.

  • You're very close.
  • It's something that comes along with whatever else you're talking about.
  • If you accept one thing, you accept the things -- even the negative things -- that come with it.
  • I don't know what this exact issue is, but I hope that helps.
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.

1 Answers
0
You're very close.

It's something that comes along with whatever else you're talking about.

If you accept one thing, you accept the things -- even the negative things -- that come with it.

I don't know what this exact issue is, but I hope that helps.

Related Questions