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Saturday, August 10, 2019

Learning English in Idiomatic Ways

Idiomatic expressions are a type of informal language that have a meaning different from the meaning of the words in the expression. 

Description

An idiom is a phrase or an expression that has a figurative, or sometimes literal, meaning. Categorized as formulatic language, an idiom's figurative meaning is different from the literal meaning. (Wikipedia)

I usually used some of the idiomatic impression in my daily living. It is quite fun and interesting, at the same time it give colors on the way you communicate since the language are simple but the meaning is deep.

Here are some idiomatic expressions we usually hear and use with their meanings:

Above and beyond
— more than is expected or required

Act one’s age
— to be mature and nit childish

Action speaks louder than voice
— A person’s intention can be judged better by means of what they do rather than what they are saying.

An apple a day keeps doctor away
— eating healthy food will prevent you on getting sick

Apple of the eye
— someone or somethings favorite

A storm in a teacup
— Unnecessary anger or worry about an unimportant or trivial matter

At the drop of a hay
— means without any hesitation or instantly

Bad apple
— a discontented, trouble maker or dishonest person

Barking up the wrong tree
— pointing at the wrong person or looking at the wrong place

Be a cold day in hell
— will never happen

Be head over heels
— be in love with somebody very much

Bed of roses
— comfortable situation

Bedroom eyes
— expression of the eyes that seems to invite in sex

Best of both worlds
— meaning you have it all or all the advantages

Beat around the Bush
— means you are not speaking directly about the issue or avoiding the main topic

Better late than never
— it implies that a belated achievement is better than not reaching a goal at all.

Big cheese
— an important person in a company or organization

Birds of the same feather flocks together
— People having similar characters, backgrounds, interests, or beliefs.

Bite off more than you can chew
— Try to do more than one is capable of doing

Bite the Bullet
—  To do something even though it involves pain, discomfort, or difficulty

Bite the Hand That Feeds You
— Act badly toward someone who has helped you

Bitter Pill to Swallow
— An unpleasant fact that one must accept

Black Sheep
— A person who does not fit into a group, especially a family

Blow the Whistle
— Reporting an illegal or unacceptable activity to the authorities

Blessing in disguise
— something good happens not accordance to your expectation

Bring Home the Bacon
— Earn money for one’s family

Break a leg
— good luck

Break the ice
— to get something started, particularly by means of social introduction or conversation

Call the Shots
— Make the important decisions in an organization

Can’t See the Forest for the Trees
— Is unable to maintain a wider perspective

Cat Fight
— A fight between two women

Chase rainbows
— to pursue unrealistic goals

Couch potato
— lazy person who watches a great deal of televisions

Cross that bridge when you come to it
— deal with the problem when it is necessary not before

Cry over spilt milk
— means being upset over something that happened which cannot be changed

Curiosity killed the cat
— means to warn someone not to ask too many questions about something because it can leads you to danger

Devil’a advocate
— expressing an opinion which you may not agree with but which is very different to what other people have been saying, in order to make the argument more interesting.

Digging around
— looking for

Dog in the Manger
— A person who prevents others from using something, even though the person himself or herself does not want it

Don’t count your chicken before eggs have hatched
— don’t make plab for something that might not happen

Don’t judge the book by its cover
— outward or physical appearance cannot determine someone or something. Do not be deceived by looks

Don’t Look a Gift Horse in the Mouth
— Do not question the value of a gift. The expression comes from the practice of determining the age and health of a horse by looking at its teeth.

Don’t put all your eggs in one basket
— do not put all your resources in one possibility

Every cloud has silver lining 
— be optimistic, even difficult times will lead to better days

Face the Music
— Dealing with consequences of one’s actions

Fall on One’s Sword
— To accept blame; to sacrifice oneself

Fat Cat
— A highly placed, well-paid executive

Father Figure
— A mentor, a person who offers guidance

Find Your Feet
— To adjust to a new place or situation

Flew off the handle
— went crazy

Fly High
— Be very successful, especially temporarily

Give the benefit of the doubt
— believing on someone’s statement without proof

Hard to swallow
— difficult to believe

Have Bigger Fish to Fry
— Have more important things to do

Hit the books
— to study

Hot potato
— controversial or difficult project that is best avoided

It takes two to tango
— actions or communications need more than one person

Jack of All Trade
— A person with a wide variety of skills

Keep an Eye Peeled
— Be observant; watch out for something

Kills two birds with one stone
— accomplish two different things at the same time

Larger Than Life
— Conveying a sense of greatness, imposing

Last But Not Least
— What I have just said does not reflect a ranking in importance.

Learn the Ropes
— Become more familiar with a job or field of endeavor; be trained

Lend an Ear
— Listen

Let the cat out of the bag
— accidentally told a secret

Let sleeping dogs lie
— To leave things as they are especially, to avoid restarting or rekindling an old argument or to leave disagreements in the past. 

Life is A Bowl of Cherries
— Life is wonderful or very pleasant

Make a long story short
— straighbto the point and leave out details

Miss the boat
— someone miss his or her chance

Not One’s Cup of Tea
— Not something one is interested in

Not a spark of decency
— no manners

Not playing with a full deck
— someone who lacks intelligence

No Tree Grows to the Sky
— Growth cannot continue indefinitely.

One step at a time
— do something slowly and carefully

On cloud nine
— extremely very happy

On the ball
— when someone understand the situation well

Once in a blue moon
— happens very rarely

Pass With Flying Colors
— To succeed brilliantly, as on an exam or other test

Picture paints a thousand words
— a picture can tell more complex ideas

Piece of cake
— a job or task that is easy or simple

Powder Keg
— An explosive situation, a situation in which people are angry and ready to be violent

Put your best foot forward
— try your best in everything you are doing

Quote Unquote
— Ironically speaking; suggesting that if a phrase were written out, it would be in quotation marks to convey sarcasm

Raining cats and dogs
— raining heavily

See eye to eye
— agreeing on something

Set in Stone
— Fixed; unchangeable

Show One’s True Colors
— Reveal one’s true nature

Sit on the fence
— when someone does not want to choose or make decision

Steal someone’s thunder
— to take the credit for something someone else did

Take with a grain of salt
— not to take ehat someone say seriously

Taste of your own medicine
— means something happens to you or is done to you that you have done to someone else

That’s music to my ear
— very happy hearing something

Threw in the towel
— give up

Toe the Line
— Accept authority, follow the rules

Went out the window
— dissappear

When it rains it pours
— When one thing goes wrong, many other things also go wrong.

When pigs fly
— never

By: Maerz





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