Yahoo Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: Lines Crossed
  2. Browse & Discover Thousands of Book Titles, for Less.

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. get (one's) lines crossed. To have a misunderstanding or miscommunication with someone else. I'm sorry I'm late, I thought we were getting here at 8—we must have gotten our lines crossed. My mom and I got our lines crossed, and now there's no one here to babysit the kids. See also: crosse, get, line.

  3. get (one's) lines crossed. To have a misunderstanding or miscommunication with someone else. I'm sorry I'm late, I thought we were getting here at 8—we must have gotten our lines crossed. My mom and I got our lines crossed, and now there's no one here to babysit the kids. See also: crosse, get, line.

  4. idiom. Add to word list. to have a different understanding of the same situation: We must have got our wires crossed – I thought she was arriving tomorrow, not today. Note: Used to talk about two or more people who fail to understand each other.

  5. Definition. Entries Near. Show more. Save Word. get/have one's wires crossed. idiom. informal, of two people. : to fail to understand each other : to be confused because each person has a different idea about what is happening or being said. We got our wires crossed for a minute there—I thought you were asking me something else.

  6. ( informal) misunderstand each other: I think we’ve got our lines crossed somewhere. I said Venice, not Vienna. ♢ We must have got crossed wires. I thought you were going to drive, not me. This refers to telephone wires/lines that are not connected properly. See also: crosse, get, line, wire. Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary © Farlex 2017.

  7. Sep 23, 2015 · Having your lines crossed goes back to teamsters and wagons. If they connected the lines incorrectly to the horse teams, when they pulled in one direction the horse would be led in the other direction. Having your lines crossed would make you steer the horses in the wrong direction, the horses couldn't understand you.

  8. You can use the idiom “cross the line” in several tenses, depending on the context you’re dealing with: Crossed the line is the past tense: He crossed the line when he insulted her in front of their friends. Crossing the line is the present progressive tense: She is crossing the line by sharing personal information about her coworkers.

  1. People also search for