0
Newguest Posted 15 years ago
Vocabulary

Old wolf/to his credit

Hi

Two women and a man were sitting at a table in a bar. When the man walked away for a while, one woman said to the other:

Look out for him, Miss Mayfield. He ’s an old wolf if

ever there was one. I will say, to his credit, he sticks to his

age group, which some don’t.

Does it mean he's a guy who likes women?

What about "if ever there was one"?

As for the last sentence I take it to mean that he, to his advantage, sticks to women of his age and some other guys like him don't.
  

Top answer

Your analysis is correct. "If there ever was one" = "and this is a perfect example".

  • Your analysis is correct.
  • "If there ever was one" = "and this is a perfect example".
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
Your analysis is correct.

"If there ever was one" = "and this is a perfect example".
0
Now it's clear. Thank you.

Related Questions