feel something in your bones
feel (something) in (one's) bones
To feel something intuitively. Something bad is going to happen tonight—I can feel it in my bones.
See also: bone, feel
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
feel something in your bones
If you say that you can feel something in your bones, you mean that you feel very strongly that you are right about something, although you cannot explain why. Joe, I have a hunch you're going to lose tonight. I just feel it in my bones. Note: Verbs such as know, believe, and sense are sometimes used instead of feel. No amount of argument can disguise what people across the country know in their bones. His departure is not just a sadness and a loss; it is potentially a crisis. Convention is very important — you'd think a conservative would know that in his bones. Note: You can also say that you have a feeling in your bones. I've got a feeling in my bones we're going to lose this by-election.
See also: bone, feel, something
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed.
- feel in bones
- feel in one's bones
- feel in your bones
- feel (something) in (one's) bones
- feel honored
- feel like
- feel like doing
- feel like oneself
- feel like something/like doing something
- feel (something) with (something)