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  1. While the assistant managers disagreed on style, they were cut from the same cloth in their dedication and hard work. Despite coming from very different backgrounds, the scientists found they were cut from the same cloth in their love of discovery and solving complex problems.

  2. Jun 29, 2023 · The phrase "cut from the same cloth" has its origins steeped in the textile industry. Dating back centuries, the phrase is tied to the process of making clothes. When used to create multiple garments, a single piece of cloth ensured that the garments shared similar patterns, textures, and qualities. During the Middle Ages, clothing began to be ...

  3. Textiles were FAR more expensive and time consuming to produce than today, and clothing was harder to produce in general. Most working class to middle class people would have had a set or two of everyday clothes which would be modified based on the activity they were partaking in wether they be laboring in the field or sitting in church.

  4. Jan 10, 2022 · Most people will not notice or care that the cut is the same if the color is different (plus that would be an extremely ridiculous complaint to make to the boss, since you wouldn’t have the possible concern about lack of laundering – “make my coworker wear dresses with different necklines!” or whatever is going to be met with bafflement ...

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  6. May 22, 2023 · 3. Manager keeps delaying our team off-site and I’m frustrated. I’ve been working at my company for one year, and my manager started working here around the same time. We have a small team (two other coworkers) and are all remote, but all teams at this company are allocated a travel budget for multiple team off-sites per year.

  7. Dec 4, 2021 · The Chicago men’s garment workers began a strike in late 1910 that extended through the winter into 1911 and began among women and people of immigrant backgrounds, only incorporating men once it picked up steam. The lack of uniformity among the striking workers led to a fragmented approach to the strike and eventually, middle-class women came to the aid of factory workers and took over ...

  8. While the exact origins of this idiom are unknown, the term most likely comes from the tailoring industry, describing the making of separate articles of clothing from the same piece of cloth. Although these clothing items would appear different, they were created by the same source.