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词组 any port in a storm
释义
Idiom
any port in a storm
Theme: SOLUTION
a phrase indicating that when one is in difficulties one must accept any way out, whether one likes the solution or not.
I don't want to live with my parents, hut it's a case of any port in a storm. I can t find an apartment.He hates his job, but he can t get another. Any port in a storm, you know.
idiomany port in a stormspoken used in order to say that you will take any help or solution that is available when you are having trouble, even if it is from a person, organization etc that you do not like:I don't like Celia, really, it was just any port in a storm after my divorce.The restaurant was Italian, and I hate Italian food, but any port in a storm.

any port in a storm

Any solution, however unappealing, is acceptable in times of trouble. This originated as a nautical phrase. I don't really like Meg, but I had to ask her for help because she was the only one still in the office last night when my computer crashed. Any port in a storm, I guess.

any port in a storm

Fig. when one is having serious trouble, one must accept any solution, whether one likes the solution or not. I don't want to live with my parents, but it's a case of any port in a storm. I can't find an apartment I can afford. He hates his job, but he can't get another. Any port in a storm, you know.

any port in a storm

Any solution to a difficult situation (is better than none), as in John's plan isn't ideal, but any port in a storm. This metaphor was first recorded in 1749.

any port in a storm

in adverse circumstances any source of relief or escape is welcome.
Literally, this expression applies to a ship seeking shelter from rough weather; it has been in use as a proverb from at least the mid 18th century.

any port in a ˈstorm

(saying) when you are in trouble you will accept help, etc. that would be unacceptable otherwise: When he went to work there he had been unemployed for a year. It was a case of any port in a storm.

any port in a storm

Any relief is welcome when one is in great difficulties. The phrase appears in an eighteenth-century play by James Cobb and in Fanny Hill (1759), by John Cleland, where it is suggested that it was already common.

any port in a storm

Assistance or refuge in a predicament especially an unpalatable one. The metaphor is of sailors happy for any place of safety whatsoever when dangerous weather comes up.
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更新时间:2025/1/29 9:32:10