+ All Categories
Home > Education > English idioms

English idioms

Date post: 01-Dec-2014
Category:
Upload: rachelle-ann-bautista
View: 284 times
Download: 2 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
 
Popular Tags:
20
ENGLISH IDIOMS BY: TEA CHER CIE LLY
Transcript
Page 1: English idioms

ENGLISH ID

IOMS

BY :

TE

AC

HE

R C

I EL LY

Page 2: English idioms

PULL A RABBIT OUT OF A HAT

do something surprising, something that seems impossible.

Example:

Barker: We haven't won yet, and three races is a lot to win.

Spithill: I want to pull a rabbit out of a hat in the history of sport.

Page 3: English idioms

COMFORT FOOD

 food that provides a sense of well-being or consolation, often food associated with home cooking from childhood. 

Example:

When I am, sad, I always want to eat my comfort food – Pepperoni Pizza.

Page 4: English idioms

LET THE CHIPS FALL WHERE THEY MAY

• Accept unknown consequences. 

• Let something happen regardless of the consequences and no matter what happens

Example:

 I'm going to tell Ellen the truth about her husband, let the chips fall where they may. 

Kathy decided to risk her money on the investment, and let the chips fall where they may.

Page 5: English idioms

A STONE'S THROW

 a very short distance

Example:

We were staying in a small apartment

just a stone's throw from the beach. 

The city center is only a stone's

throw away.

Page 6: English idioms

DIG IN YOUR HEELS

• refuse to compromise, stick firmly to your position.

• to refuse to alter one's course of action or opinions; to be obstinate or determined.

Example:

The student dug her heels in and refused to obey the instructions. I'm digging in my heels. I'm not going back.

Page 7: English idioms

GET OUT OF HAND

•  become uncontrollable. This is said of a situation, not a person. 

• if a situation gets out of hand, it cannot be controlled any more

Example:

Things got a little out of hand at the party and three windows were broken. 

In my first year at college my drinking got a bit out of hand.

Page 8: English idioms

POUND THE PAVEMENT

• Diligently and tirelessly working towards a desired objective such as getting a job or building up a business.

• The idiom is often used to mean looking for a job.

Example:

I spent two months pounding the pavement after the factory I worked for dosed. 

Page 9: English idioms

GET SOMETHING OUT OF YOUR SYSTEM 

• may have a literal meaning, to eliminate something (like food or medicine) from your body.

• But also quite common is the idiomatic meaning: to do something that you have been wanting to do so that you don't have to think about it any more.

• to be rid of the desire to do something; to do something that you have been wanting to do so that you aren't bothered by wanting to do it anymore.

Example:

He'll be more active once he gets the medicine out of his system.

I can't get it out of my system! I want to go back to school and earn a degree.

Page 10: English idioms

EXPERIENCE SOMETHING FIRST-HAND

To experience something yourself.

Example:

I didn’t realize how hard it was to be a parent until I experienced it first-hand.

Page 11: English idioms

GO DOWN IN FLAMES

• fail spectacularly

• [for a plane] to crash

Example:

The whole project went down in flames. 

Todd went down in flames in his efforts to win the heart of Marsha.

 The enemy fighter planes went down in flames, ending the battle. 

Page 12: English idioms

CRY WOLF

• to cry or complain about something when nothing is really wrong.

• raise a false alarm. This idiom comes from one of Aesop's fables, where a boy keeps warning of a wolf when there is no wolf, and eventually nobody believes him. 

Example:

Pay no attention. She's just crying wolf again. 

Don't cry wolf too often. No one will come.

Page 13: English idioms

TICKLED PINK

• very much pleased or entertained

• This is a rather old idiom, but it's still in general use.

Example:

 I was tickled pink to have you visit us.

We were tickled pink when your flowers arrived.

Page 14: English idioms

HAPPY AS A CLAM

• contented; very happy

• Why would clams be happy? It has been suggested that open clams give the appearance of smiling. The derivation is more likely to come from the fuller version of the phrase, now rarely heard - 'as happy as a clam at high water'. Hide tide is when clams are free from the attentions of predators; surely the happiest of times in the bivalve mollusk world.

Example:

 I've been as happy as a clam since I moved to the country. I don't need much. Just somewhere to live, some work to do, and a TV to watch, and I'm happy as a clam at high tide. 

Page 15: English idioms

SHOOT FROM THE HIP

• speak impulsively, speak without thinking first. 

Example:

John has a tendency to shoot from the hip, but he generally speaks the truth. Don't pay any attention to John. He means no harm. It's just his nature to shoot from the hip.

Page 16: English idioms

CRUNCH TIME

• a period of time when hard work is especially necessary.

• Often used to describe the period just before a project is due. 

Example:

I'd love to go out with you and your friends tonight, but it's crunch time at work—our big project is due next week, and we're all meeting to finish it up.

Page 17: English idioms

NO BRAINER

• An easy decision, an obvious course of action.

• Something so simple or easy as to require no thought.

Example:

She is a no brainer. She went to that company without thinking about it. Now she suffers the consequences

Page 18: English idioms

CRUNCH TIME

• a period of time when hard work is especially necessary.

• Often used to describe the period just before a project is due. 

• a critical moment or period (as near the end of a game) when decisive action is needed

Example:

The team had trained well, but at crunch time they just couldn't perform.

Page 19: English idioms

COME OUT SWINGING

• to strongly defend yourself or something you believe in

• to be very confrontational at the beginning of a debate or discussion.

Example:

Both candidates came out swinging in the televised debate Sunday night.

Page 20: English idioms

RUNNING ON FUMES

• continuing to work or stay awake when you are completely exhausted. 

• continuing to do something when you have almost no energy left 

Example:  

After two straight games against top teams, the Tigers were running on fumes and lost on Saturday night.


Recommended