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		Ask for help > I have a question about a very useful expression..     
			
		 I have a question about a very useful expression.. 
		
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 binhobear
 
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							| I have a question about a very useful expression.. 
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							| Here in Brazil we say a lot of this like, translating literally: closing a contract, not about a closure but relating to something good.  Would you guys help me out to put this into english keeping the same meaning, like something that you �ll do a good deal.  I googled it and all I found was "cut a deal" and "close a deal".... Would you mind helping me out please????   Thanks in advance...  |  8 Apr 2015      
					
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 yanogator
 
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							|  Of course, what you �re finding is literal expressions. Please give us an entire sentence (translated into English, of course) that uses the phrase, so we �ll have a context to use. We �ll be able to help you better then.   Bruce  |  8 Apr 2015     
					
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 Mariethe House
 
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							| We �ve landed a contract. We �ve won a contract. We have come to an agreement . .... |  9 Apr 2015     
					
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 douglas
 
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							| I �m guessing you could use "closed the deal" to express being successful in something (e.g. with a girl) --but that �s the closest I can come-up with using the little amount of info you �ve provided.   Cheers, Douglas |  9 Apr 2015     
					
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 cunliffe
 
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							| What about  �pull it off �. If you set out out to do something and manage with some success, that �s what we say,  �I pulled it off. � |  9 Apr 2015     
					
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 douglas
 
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							| I agree, "pull it off" could be what you �re looking for. |  9 Apr 2015     
					
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 cunliffe
 
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							| Mariethe, if you are talking about a contract,  �we won it �, or  �we got it, � is fine. In a more general sense, not necessarily a legal contract,  �we came through �,  �we came out on top �,  �we got/struck a great deal, �  �we came up trumps �; this kind of phrase might be better. Bruce is right that the context would help. |  9 Apr 2015     
					
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 cunliffe
 
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							| Why, ha �way man, Mariethe, yer a canny lass! Eh bien, ma ch�re, tu es une fille sympa! (or something like that)....;) |  9 Apr 2015     
					
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 redcamarocruiser
 
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							| I think that "neg�cio fechado", if that is the phrase you have in mind, can sometimes be expressed "as end of story" meaning that there was a positive outcome or  some situation was resolved. Would that fit your context? 
 
 |  9 Apr 2015     
					
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