A cup of tea
By
Edward Williamson
• 2 hours ago
67
views
$
0.005 earned
A cup of tea" can have two meanings: literally, a single serving of the beverage, or figuratively, as an idiom referring to something someone likes or is well-suited for. The idiom is often used in a negative construction, like "not my cup of tea," to politely state a disinterest or dislike for a particular person, task, or activity.
artsciportal.wustl.edu/sites/artsciportal.wustl.edu/files/webform/webform13385/sid/volbkabak.pdf
artsciportal.wustl.edu/sites/artsciportal.wustl.edu/files/webform/webform13385/sid/volhafjh.pdf
artsciportal.wustl.edu/sites/artsciportal.wustl.edu/files/webform/webform13385/sid/voljaisf.pdf
artsciportal.wustl.edu/sites/artsciportal.wustl.edu/files/webform/webform13385/sid/volkowkeo.pdf
artsciportal.wustl.edu/sites/artsciportal.wustl.edu/files/webform/webform13385/sid/volthuhts.pdf
artsciportal.wustl.edu/sites/artsciportal.wustl.edu/files/webform/webform13385/sid/volmakkam.pdf
artsciportal.wustl.edu/sites/artsciportal.wustl.edu/files/webform/webform13384/sid/volbkabak.pdf
artsciportal.wustl.edu/sites/artsciportal.wustl.edu/files/webform/webform13384/sid/volhafjh.pdf
artsciportal.wustl.edu/sites/artsciportal.wustl.edu/files/webform/webform13384/sid/voljaisf.pdf
artsciportal.wustl.edu/sites/artsciportal.wustl.edu/files/webform/webform13384/sid/volkowkeo.pdf
artsciportal.wustl.edu/sites/artsciportal.wustl.edu/files/webform/webform13384/sid/volmakkam.pdf
artsciportal.wustl.edu/sites/artsciportal.wustl.edu/files/webform/webform13384/sid/volthuhts.pdf