A phrase my guardian used growing up and has unfortunately stuck with me as my initial response, my apologies.
The full phrase I think is “Thats like a pot calling a kettle black” or something like that. And my regrettable and curt response was “we are alike, and reading your comment has upset me in that I interpretated it with the implication that we are not.”
Not quite right. If you get upset that pickpocketed your phone when I know for a fact that you were just bragging last week about having shoplifted something from a store, I might say “That’s a pot calling the kettle black”, meaning “You are being not recognizing that you are being hypocritical for calling out an action that you yourself are guilty of.”
A better phrase to indicate a likeness would be “You are preaching to the choir.”
echodot@feddit.uk 6 months ago
I’m worried that you don’t know what that aphorism means, because that comment made absolutely zero sense whatsoever.
KillingAndKindess@lemmy.blahaj.zone 6 months ago
A phrase my guardian used growing up and has unfortunately stuck with me as my initial response, my apologies.
The full phrase I think is “Thats like a pot calling a kettle black” or something like that. And my regrettable and curt response was “we are alike, and reading your comment has upset me in that I interpretated it with the implication that we are not.”
radicalautonomy@lemmy.world 6 months ago
Not quite right. If you get upset that pickpocketed your phone when I know for a fact that you were just bragging last week about having shoplifted something from a store, I might say “That’s a pot calling the kettle black”, meaning “You are being not recognizing that you are being hypocritical for calling out an action that you yourself are guilty of.”
A better phrase to indicate a likeness would be “You are preaching to the choir.”
echodot@feddit.uk 6 months ago
Pot calling the kettle black is used when somebody is making a hypocritic statement.