It’s a way of saying time is being wasted. Time is a-wastin’ away. The term was used in a song by Johnny cash, not sure if origin is American slang or something used in English everywhere.
It’s English english - and has migrated all over the world. Probably more common in USA as it’s a fairly antique way to add emphasis and they’ve kept a lot of antique usages that English english hasn’t kept.
feel like the day is awastin except I was up at 6and did 1.5hrs housework, then watched some telly and had the rest of my sleep
the rest of the day I’ll just potter in the garden
I wouldn’t call it a waste of a day.
I’m sitting here watching the women’s odi cricket today since 10am and it’ll end probably between 4-6pm.
I’d say you’re super productive compared to me.
What’s awastin
A New Word Has Been Added To Your Vocabulary
Gotta have a definition before it saves! It’s a required field in the memory bank
It’s a way of saying time is being wasted. Time is a-wastin’ away. The term was used in a song by Johnny cash, not sure if origin is American slang or something used in English everywhere.
Thanks for the actual answer! I appreciate you
It’s English english - and has migrated all over the world. Probably more common in USA as it’s a fairly antique way to add emphasis and they’ve kept a lot of antique usages that English english hasn’t kept.
you raise an interesting to me usage of the english language
why and when do we put an “a” in front of a word 🤔
https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/eb/qa/Words-with-the-Prefix-A-
Time