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grist
grist for (one's) mill
Something that initially seems bad or negative but is ultimately used in a positive way by someone. A: "The tabloids found out that you've been in rehab. How do you plan on handling it?" B: "It's just grist for my mill—I'm a changed man now, and that's what I'll tell the media. At least they're writing about me again!"
grist to (one's) mill
Something that initially seems bad or negative but is ultimately used in a positive way by someone. A: "The tabloids found out that you've been in rehab. How do you plan on handling it?" B: "It's just grist to my mill—I'm a changed man now, and that's what I'll tell the media. At least they're writing about me again!"
grist for the mill
and grist for someone's mill; grist to the millFig. something useful or needed. Bob bases the novels he writes on his own experience, so everything that happens to him is grist for the mill. Ever since I started making patchwork quilts, every scrap of cloth I find is grist for the mill.
(all) grist to the mill
(British, American & Australian) also grist for your mill (American) something that you can use in order to help you to succeed As an actor, all experience is grist to the mill.
grist for the mill
Something that can be used to advantage, as in These seemingly useless data will be grist for the mill when he lodges a complaint. This expression alludes to grist, the amount of grain that can be ground at one time. [Late 1500s]
grist for
(one's)/the mill Something that can be used to advantage.
Common Names:
Name | Gender | Pronounced | Usage |
MÁRton | | MAHR-ton | Hungarian |
Valeri | | vah-LYE-ree (Russian) | Bulgarian, Georgian, Russian |
Hillel | | - | Biblical, Hebrew, Biblical Hebrew |
Valerie | | ['væləri] | |
Short | | [ʃɔ:t] | |
Eda (2) | | - | Medieval English |