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have a head for
Also,.
Be able to tolerate, as in Nell has no head for liquor , or Luckily I have a good head for heights . [Early 1800s]
Have a mental aptitude for, as in She has a good head for figures and straightened out the statistics in no time . [Early 1900s]
Example Sentences
The bridge offers unusual views for visitors who have a head for heights.
“The pay, mostly. They both do the figuring. It’s an easy job—if you have a head for figures. In port, there’s plenty to do. We may sell one cargo, buy another, sell that in the next port, and buy a third. But between ports, you’d have an easy time. No watches to stand, no decks to swab.”
His letter to his friend and fellow artist Émile Bernard after painting “La Mousmé,” suggest a process akin to manual labor: “I’m so worn out from it that I hardly have a head for writing,” he wrote.
Some of the newest turbines stand nearly 200m high - so does she have a head for heights?
"Militias have a head for business," said Marcelo Freixo, a state legislator who is accompanied by a half-dozen plainclothes bodyguards because of his work to combat the groups.
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