pillow
a clean conscience makes a soft pillow
proverb If one has no feelings of guilt or remorse, then they are able to rest more easily. I have always lived an honest, upright life, and let me tell you, a clean conscience makes a soft pillow. A: "I'm so torn up over what I did! I feel like I haven't slept properly in weeks." B: "You really need to tell Jonathan the truth—you'll feel a lot better if you do. A clean conscience makes a soft pillow, after all."
See also: clean, conscience, make, pillow, soft
pillow talk
Intimate conversations between two people in a romantic relationship when they are in bed together. More than anything else, it's the pillow talk that I miss most since we had kids—we just don't have the time for it anymore, and it feels like we've become a bit distant as a result.
See also: pillow, talk
pillow-biter
offensive slang A homosexual male.
pillowed
Resting or reclining on some soft, cushioned material. She lay pillowed on velvet cushions. You should see her dog—the thing sleeps at night pillowed in a lush satin mattress. I swear, it has a better life than I do.
See also: pillow
the best advice is found on the pillow
proverb Being well-rested will likely help you to solve or address an issue or problem. If you're unsure of how to proceed, why not get back to me in the morning? After all, the best advice is found on the pillow.
See also: advice, found, on, pillow
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
ˈpillow talk
(informal) a conversation in bed between lovers when promises are made which should not be taken too seriously, or secrets are revealed: ‘He said he’d never been so deeply in love in the whole of his life.’ ‘That was just pillow talk.’ ‘How did he find out about that?’ ‘Pillow talk, probably.’See also: pillow, talk
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary
pillowed
mod. pregnant. (Refers to the swelling in a pregnant woman’s abdomen.) She does look a bit pillowed, doesn’t she?
See also: pillow
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
pillow talk
Exchanging information, often of a privileged nature, in bed. Dating from the first half of the 1900s, the term was the title of a romantic comedy motion picture (1959) starring Rock Hudson and Doris Day. A New York Times article had it, “Mrs. Ford makes it plain she gets her views across to Mr.[President] Ford in what she calls ‘pillow talk’” (Aug. 4, 1975).
See also: pillow, talk
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
- a guilty conscience needs no accuser
- teach a man to fish
- it takes a village
- village
- a reed before the wind lives on(, while mighty oaks do fall)
- be the spice of life
- best-laid plans go astray, the
- the best-laid plans
- the best-laid plans go astray
- the best-laid plans of mice and men