squeezed every drop of meaning and enjoyment? [closed]
I'd like to know what 'squeeze every drop of meaning and enjoyment' means in the following. B is said to be a more specific version of A, but I suspect that 'squeeze every drop of meaning' is not a negative evaluation, unlike 'he did not like it' in A. I don't understand why B is said to be a version of A.
A: The writer wrote a three-page critique of the painting in which he said he did not like it.
B: In his three-page critique, the art critic squeezed every drop of meaning- and enjoyment- out of the 3-inch by 3-inch pastel.
I'd appreciate your help.
Solution 1:
Squeeze every drop of meaning and enjoyment out of X
is an idiom,
and an example of the cognitive phenomenon known as The Conduit Metaphor.
This metaphor governs most discussion of communication, language, and meaning in English.
It includes the idea that some "container" X
has Meaning
"inside" it, and that, by examining X
, one may "extract" its Meaning
. This counts as "understanding X
".
Like all metaphors, this is actually quite false.
Usually the conduit metaphor is used for human speech and writing
- I had to absorb Einstein's ideas gradually
- His deepest emotions went right over her head
- We couldn't get all that stuff into our brains in one afternoon
but in this case it's applied to a
3-inch by 3-inch pastel
i.e, a crayon drawing. And since the Meaning
of a drawing, like a concerto, is rather vague,Meaning
can be thought of as a vague mass, like a liquid. And there are lots of verbs for liquids.
To squeeze all the Y
out of X
means to take out all the Y
that is in X
, so that there is none left.
But the object of squeeze must be a mass noun representing a liquid or very small aggregate.
In any event, it means to do something completely, and that takes competence. In this case, the critic is described as doing the "squeezing" in the space of three pages. That's around a thousand words, and that's the proverbial norm. So it doesn't have any negative connotations.
As to why the source presented it that way, I can't really say. It would depend on the motives, competence, and knowledge of the source, whatever it is. If it's from an online "English grammar" or "Learn English" site -- Beware.
There is a lot of really bad "grammar advice" out there. Most of it is free, but it's all too expensive.
Solution 2:
This is interesting, because I would say that in example B, the expression 'squeeze every drop of meaning and enjoyment' is being used in the opposite sense to that in which it is more usually employed, but it makes equal sense.
I would normally squeeze every last drop out of something I was really enjoying, like an orange. However, in your example, it seems as if the pleasure is being squeezed out in the way that you might wring a dirty dishcloth. The three page criticism has effectively rendered the pastel dry, meaningless and unenjoyable.