know one's ass from a hole in the ground
English
Alternative forms
Verb
know one's ass from a hole in the ground
- (idiomatic, vulgar) To have an adequate level of knowledge or skill; to understand what one is doing or talking about.
- 2004, David Drake, The Reaches, →ISBN, (Google preview):
- "Why are you so sure and they aren't?" the landsman said. . . .
- "Because Mr. Ricimer knows his ass from a hole in the ground, sir."
- 2005 June 12, Gary M. Pomerantz, "First Chapter: Wilt, 1962," New York Times (retrieved 26 July 2014):
- Foxx gave a comic's pause. "Just goes to show you, don't it? Some folks don't know their ass from a hole in the ground."
- 2006 Dec. 5, David Kiley, "Chrysler "Whoops" Ads Part of Important New Genre," Bloomberg (retrieved 23 Sep 2016):
- In the unofficial ad, the facilitator says about the man whose wife will be replaced, “This guy wouldn’t know his ass from a hole in the ground.”
- 2004, David Drake, The Reaches, →ISBN, (Google preview):
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