I pin my faith on you.

‘Hold on to the promise’ is also a pin. I pinned him down to his promise. That MP pinned his opponent down. Means ‘deposit’, the client said to the lawyer that I pin my faith on you. I entrust my hope to you. Westerners also use pins in other matters such as I don’t care pin. I’m not surprised at all. a little

Pin-money means ‘cost of clothing given to a woman or a small payment made for a part-time job’. Pin-prick, literally, is ‘Pricking with a needle’, most westerners use to refer to satire A little disturbance into David’s room. There is a pin-up. This means ‘a picture of a beautiful woman that (in the old days) was often cut from the newspaper and traced to the wall.’ pincushion means ‘the little pillows used. For pincushion, but if you’re telling someone that you look like a pincushion, that’s telling you that you’re ‘fat’.

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