Be/live in each other's pockets In english explanation

The meaning, explanation, definition and origin of the idiom/phrase "be/live in each other's pockets", English Idiom Dictionary ( also found in Vietnamese )

author Evelyn Nguyen calendar 2021-01-07 05:01

Meaning of Be/live in each other's pockets

Be/live in each other's pockets British informal verb phrase

To spend a great deal of time together

When I was in university, my best friend and I lived in each other's pockets for four years.

Although Susan has married, she doesn't live in her husband's pocket because her husband often goes on business trips.

We live together and work together. We live in each other's pockets.

Because Myla and Jessica have lived in each other's pockets, they share almost every secret.

Other phrases about:

no man is an island (entire of itself)

No one is able to do anything just by themselves.

in tandem
together; at the same time
live under the same roof

To live in the same home together. 

love will (always) find a way

People who are in love will overcome any difficulty to be together. (Sometimes used ironically to imply that someone is in love with something he or she is attempting to be near).

Grammar and Usage of Be/live in each other's pockets

Verb Forms

  • is/lives in each other's pockets
  • was/were/lived in each other's pockets

The verb "be/live" should be conjugated according to its tense.

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TODAY
to rob the cradle
have a romantic or sexual relationship with or marry someone much younger than oneself.
Example: The middle aged man robbed the cradle with the teenager.
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