0
Anonymous Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

what is that mean?

This is where you have
to trust going downhill.
  

Top answer

The meaning would depend on the context in which this appears. For example: In hiking-wilderness survival, there may be a situation where you have to literally slide down a hill covered with loose shale and rock. This may be the quickest, or only, way to get down from a higher elevation to a better location.

  • The meaning would depend on the context in which this appears.
  • For example: In hiking-wilderness survival, there may be a situation where you have to literally slide down a hill covered with loose shale and rock.
  • This may be the quickest, or only, way to get down from a higher elevation to a better location.
  • It may seem hazardous but you have to just trust yourself in this situation and let gravity do the work for you.
  • In stock market investing, people who "buy and hold" essentially good stocks for the long term have to weather periods when the stocks they're holding drop in value.
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.

3 Answers
0
The meaning would depend on the context in which this appears. For example:

In hiking-wilderness survival, there may be a situation where you have to literally slide down a hill covered with loose shale and rock. This may be the quickest, or only, way to get down from a higher elevation to a better location. It may seem hazardous but you have to just trust yourself in this situation an
0
Have you ever skied, or ridden a bicycle?
Imagine that you are at the top of a mountain, going downhill on a mountain bike. The mountain is steep. You are scared. But you have to trust that you can keep your balance and not fall down and hurt yourself.
0
you are really awesome thank you

Related Questions