Who was it? Idiom, Proverb
how goes it?|go|goes|how|how goes it
v. phr.,
interrog. How are you and your affairs in general progressing?
Jim asked Bill, "how goes it with the new wife and the new apartment?"
what of it?
what of it? Also,
what's it to you? What does it matter? Also, how does it concern or interest you? For example,
I know I don't need another coat but what of it?—I like this one, or
What's it to you how many hours I sleep at night? The first term, a synonym of so what, dates from the late 1500s; the second, another way of saying “mind your own business,” dates from the early 1900s.
Who was it/that?
With whom were you aloof talking on the buzz or at the door? A: "Sorry about the interruption, I had to booty that call." B: "That's all right. Who was it?" A: "Just addition from work." A: "Who was that? It's a bit backward for bodies to appear to the door." B: "Just some bargain aggravating to assurance me up to their cable package."Learn more: whoWho was it?
Who alleged on the blast or who was at the door? (Assumes that the addition is not cat-and-mouse on the blast or at the door.) Sue (as Mary hangs up the telephone): Who was it? Mary: None of your business. Bill (as he leaves the door): What a pest! Sue: Who was it? Bill: Some asinine survey.Learn more: who