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  Questions & Answers about Words   Pick your brain?
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| Member | 
 Have you heard the phrase "to pick your brain" used...to mean to discuss something in depth?  I just heard it used today, and it is one phrase that is just too literal for me.  All I think about is actual picking of the brain!      | ||
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| Member | 
 It's perfectly common in my idiom.  It means a bit more than you suggest, I think: if X is picking Y's brain on a topic, then Y is presumably some sort of authority on the subject, and X is questioning Y to try to get information or ideas for his/her own use.  I think I've heard it more often as "pick someone's brains", but either is acceptable. | |||
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| Member | 
 With Guy all the way on this one. Try the opening scene of this (after the advert), episode three of my favourite bleak black comedy - The League of Gentlemen.. (Note - because it has adult humour you do need to log in to youtube to watch it) "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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| Member | 
 
 Those of us outside of the UK can't watch this. It's a great show. | |||
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| Member | 
 Maybe searching youtube will find an unofficial copy. It's season one episode three opening sequence. A man walks into the local shop and asks "Can I pick your brains" only to have the shopkeeper cower away covering her head with her arms. Funnier to watch. "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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| Member | 
 I guess he's not local. His mind has been warped by colours, sounds and shapes. | |||
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| Member | 
 Yes, Guy, I agree with your definition.  That's the way we use it, too. | |||
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