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  1. Strange Bedfellows

    Strange Bedfellows

    1965 · Comedy · 1h 38m

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  1. Welcome to Strange Bedfellas - our growing shop in the world of fantasy dildos and monster sex toys. We have a full roster of friends here waiting for their perfect match!

  2. Strange bedfellows” is a phrase coined by Shakespeare. Its full context is “Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows.” It has come to mean finding oneself in a difficult situation forces one to associate with a condition or person (or persons) that they would not normally have anything to do with. Origin of “strange bedfellows

  3. Although strictly speaking bedfellows are persons who share a bed, like husband and wife, the term has been used figuratively since the late 1400s. This particular idiom may have been invented by Shakespeare in The Tempest (2:2), “Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows.”

  4. 1. : one who shares a bed with another. 2. : a person or thing closely associated with another : ally. political bedfellows. often used in the phrase strange bedfellows to describe an unlikely alliance of people or things.

  5. strange bedfellows. A pair of people, things, or groups connected in a certain situation or activity but extremely different in overall characteristics, opinions, ideologies, lifestyles, behaviors, etc.

  6. When Trinculo seeks shelter from a storm under the cloak of a creature he's very unsure about - he wonders if it's a man or a fish - he comments "misery acquaints a man with strange bed-fellows." ( The Tempest , Act 2, Scene 2)

  7. You refer to two things or people as bedfellows when they have become associated or related in some way. See full entry for 'bedfellow' Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s Dictionary .

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