says who you
1says\ who — • says who • says you v. phr. slang I don t believe or accept that. An expression of rebuff often used to make fun of someone or oppose him. I am the strongest boy on the block. Says you. That brook is full of trout. Says who? I never saw anybody …
2says who — or[says you] {v. phr.}, {slang} I don t believe or accept that. An expression of rebuff often used to make fun of someone or oppose him. * / I am the strongest boy on the block. Says you./ * / That brook is full of trout. Says who? I never saw… …
3says who — or[says you] {v. phr.}, {slang} I don t believe or accept that. An expression of rebuff often used to make fun of someone or oppose him. * / I am the strongest boy on the block. Says you./ * / That brook is full of trout. Says who? I never saw… …
4Says who? — AND Sez who? interrog. a formulaic challenge indicating disagreement with someone who has said something. (See also Says you!) □ TOM: Says who? FRED: Says me, that’s who! □ She drew herself up to her full height, looked him straight in the eye,… …
5Who Says (Selena Gomez & the Scene song) — Who Says Single by Selena Gomez the Scene from the album When the Sun Goes Down B side …
6Who Says (canción de Selena Gomez & The Scene) — «Who Says» Sencillo de Selena Gomez The Scene del álbum When the Sun Goes Down Publicación …
7Who Says (chanson de Selena Gomez) — Who Says Single par Selena Gomez The Scene extrait de l’album When The Sun Goes Down Sortie …
8says\ you — • says who • says you v. phr. slang I don t believe or accept that. An expression of rebuff often used to make fun of someone or oppose him. I am the strongest boy on the block. Says you. That brook is full of trout. Says who? I never saw anybody …
9Who's on First? — is a comedy routine made famous by Abbott and Costello. The premise of the routine is that Abbott is identifying the players on a baseball team to Costello, but their names and nicknames can be interpreted as non responsive answers to Costello s… …
10who and whom — 1. Who is used as a relative pronoun (The woman who saw you) and as an interrogative (Who is there?), and whom is, formally, its objective form (The woman whom you saw / Whom did you see?). In all these uses who (or whom) refers to a person or to …