as dirty as blue pearls
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The phrase “as dirty as blue pearls” is a metaphorical expression used to describe something or someone who is considered extremely dirty or morally corrupt, thoroughly depraved, or corrupt. The phrase should not be taken literally, as blue pearls are actually prized for their lustrous and pristine appearance. *AI-generated response. Please verify the facts.
Overheard a phrase in a podcast—“as dirty as blue pearls”—and then looked it up online. In doing so, the AI engine generates a definition of a non-existent idiom: a random conglomeration of associations of all the words in the sentence, which nevertheless seems poetic—a structure of meaning produced by the algorithm.
In many languages, such in Japanese, Chinese, Korean and Arabic, the word “blue” is sometimes used to refer to green objects. Seeing something green and describing it as blue. And the question: can blue pearls be dirty?