to be in the swim with
1swim with the tide — swim against/with/the tide phrase to do or believe the opposite to other people the same as other people Thesaurus: to be similar to, or the same as, something or someonesynonym to be different from somethingsynonym …
2swim with the tide — If you swim with the tide, you do the same as people around you and accept the general consensus. ( Go with the tide is an alternative form.) …
3swim with the fishes — If someone is swimming with the fishes, they are dead, especially if they have been murdered. Sleep with the fishes is an alternative form …
4swim with/against the tide — see ↑tide, 1 • • • Main Entry: ↑swim …
5The Boys with the Golden Stars — is a Romanian fairy tale collected in Rumanische Märchen . Andrew Lang included it in The Violet Fairy Book .ynopsisA herdsman had three daughters, and the youngest was the most beautiful. One day, the emperor rode by with attendants. The oldest… …
6swim with the tide — go/swim with the tide go/swim against the tide to do the opposite of what most other people are doing. If you don t feel strongly about an issue, you may as well just swim with the tide …
7swim with the tide — If you swim with the tide, you do the same as people around you and accept the general consensus. ( Go with the tide is an alternative form.) (Dorking School Dictionary) …
8The Seas with Nemo & Friends — Infobox Disney ride name= The Seas with Nemo Friends caption= park= Epcot land=Future World designer= Walt Disney Imagineering manufacturer= Montgomery Watson type= theme= control system= propulsion=Omnimover soft opened= opened= January 15, 1986 …
9To be in the swim — Swim Swim, n. 1. The act of swimming; a gliding motion, like that of one swimming. B. Jonson. [1913 Webster] 2. The sound, or air bladder, of a fish. [1913 Webster] 3. A part of a stream much frequented by fish. [Eng.] [1913 Webster] {Swim… …
10swim with the fishes — If someone is swimming with the fishes, they are dead, especially if they have been murdered. Sleep with the fishes is an alternative form. (Dorking School Dictionary) …