Idiom of the Day
🔰(something) occurs to you
☑️Meaning: If something occurs to you, you think of it.
✨For example:
➖I was surprised when I heard that Anne had quit. It had never occurred to me that she wasn't happy working here.
➖Has it ever occurred to you that your daughter's happiness is more important than what your friends might think if they know she's gay?
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Slang of the Day
🔰hooky | hookey
🇺🇸American English
☑️Meaning: (in phrase play hooky) to stay away from school or work without permission
✨For example:
🔹Let's play hooky tomorrow and go watch the golf. Things are pretty quiet at work anyway.
🔹When I was a kid, I was caught playing hookey when school inspectors nabbed us at the mall.
💥Variety: This slang term is typically used in American English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Slang of the Day
🔰chockablock | chock-a-block | chock-full
☑️Meaning: completely full of people or things, crammed full
✨For example:
➖My suitcase is chockablock with clothes and books and shoes and stuff. I couldn't possibly get anything else in there.
➖@Englishoftheday is chock-full of great stuff for learners of English.
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Idiom of the Day
💥red tape
☑️Meaning: Strict adherence to rules and regulations so that a procedure seems to take longer than necessary.
✨For example:
➖It takes a long time to set up a company in some countries because of all the red tape involved in getting government permits.
➖It took two weeks to get visas for our aid workers because of all the red tape.
📌Origin: Probably related to the fact that bundles of official government documents are often tied together with red tape.
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Idiom of the Day
🔰on the ball
INFORMAL
☑️Meaning: If you're on the ball, you're alert and you know what's going on around you.
✨For example:
🔹I didn't get much sleep last night so I'm not really on the ball today.
🔹My brother is always on the ball, so it's hard to trick him or catch him unawares.
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Slang of the Day
🔰jab
☑️Meaning: an injection with a hypodermic syringe
✨For example:
▪️I went to see my doctor yesterday to get a flu jab.
▪️It's time for our kids to get another set of vaccination jabs. I'll take them to the clinic in the morning.
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Phrasal Verb of the Day
💥end up
☑️Meaning: If you end up being somewhere, or doing something, it's because of decisions you've made in the past.
💧For example:
✨end up
🔹 If Jimmy keeps taking drugs, he'll end up in jail or dead.
✨end up doing sth
🔹 If you don't study hard, you could end up doing a job you don't like much.
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Slang of the Day
🔰upchuck
🇺🇸American English
☑️Meaning: to vomit, throw up
✨For example:
🔘I ate so much chocolate cake that I nearly upchucked the lot right there.
🔘The last time Jimmy got drunk he upchucked all over the back seat of his friend's car. His friend wasn't too happy about it.
✅Variety: This slang term is typically used in American English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Phrasal Verb of the Day
🔰cross out
☑️Meaning: If you cross something out, you draw a line through it with a pen or a pencil, usually because it's wrong or is no longer necessary.
💧For example:
✨cross sth out
🔹If you make a mistake, cross it out and write down what you think is correct instead.
✨cross out sth
🔹When guests arrive, cross out their names on the guest list so that we know they're here.
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Idiom of the Day
🔰the worse for wear
☑️Meaning: If something is the worse for wear, it has been damaged by being used a lot. If a person is the worse for wear, they don't feel well.
✨For example:
🔹Don't you think we should have the sofa recovered? It's looking a little the worse for wear.
🔹Tom looks a bit the worse for wear this morning. I bet he was out drinking with his buddies last night.
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Idiom of the Day
🔰up to your neck | up to your eyeballs
☑️Meaning: If you're up to your neck in something, or up to your eyeballs in something, you've got too much of it and it's become a problem.
✨For example:
🔹I'm up to my neck in emails and I don't think I can get away at the moment.
🔹Christmas is the worst time at the animal shelter. We're always up to our eyeballs in stray dogs and cats.
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Idiom of the Day
📗young at heart
☑️Meaning: Someone is young at heart if they still feel young even though they're getting old.
✨For example:
📍Terry's nearly seventy but he's still young at heart. He's always trying new things and going to new places.
📍No matter how old I get, I'll always be young at heart.
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Phrasal Verb of the Day
🔰root out
☑️Meaning: to uncover and punish criminals, especially those abusing positions of trust or authority
💧For example:
🔹root out sb ➡️The president has promised to root out corrupt politicians and send them to jail.
🔸root sb out ➡️The bank's investigation team targeted several workers suspected of stealing money, and it succeeded in rooting them out.
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Slang of the Day
📗knuckle sandwich
☑️Meaning: a punch in the mouth
❄️For example:
🔹Vince turned around and said, "Shut up, pal, or you'll get a knuckle sandwich to chew on."
🔹After he'd punched the thief, the shopkeeper said, "Knuckle sandwiches are free, loser. But you gotta pay for that stuff in your pockets."
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Idiom of the Day
🔰the cream of the crop
☑️Meaning: If something or someone is in the cream of the crop, they are among the best of a class of things or people.
💧For example:
🔹The cream of the crop of this year's high-school graduates will get into the best universities, as usual.
🔹We're only interested in the cream of the crop, so don't send us any second-rate samples.
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Idiom of the Day
🔰the upper crust
☑️Meaning: If you are one of the upper crust, you are a member of society's highest class.
✨For example:
➖If Laura was really part of the upper crust, she wouldn't need to borrow money all the time, would she?
➖Marge does a great imitation of an upper-crust "society queen". It's really funny, and her upper-crust accent is perfect.
💥Note:
If used to modify a noun or a noun phrase, a hyphen should be added, as in "upper-crust party".
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Idiom of the Day
🔰the ball's in your court
☑️Meaning: If someone you're negotiating with says "the ball's in your court", they think it's your turn to make a move or make an offer.
✨For example:
🔹We've offered him ten thousand dollars a month, so the ball's in his court now.
🔹They know our position, so the ball's in their court. If they want to pursue the matter, they'll have to make the next move.
💥Origin: Metaphorical, from sports such as tennis and badminton in which players take turns to hit a ball over a net into each other's end of the court.
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Phrasal Verb of the Day
💥laze around
☑️Meaning: to relax and do very little
✨For example:
➖My son would laze around in front of the TV all day if we let him.
➖Instead of doing exciting things like kite-surfing and jet-skiing, my daughter just lazed around the pool tanning herself and chatting on her phone.
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Slang of the Day
💥hang | hang out
☑️Meaning: to spend time with
✨For example:
➖I'm goin' down the park to hang with my friends.
➖Hey, you girls. Why don't you hang out with me and the guys for a while?
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Idiom of the Day
🔰an even break
🇺🇸American English
☑️Meaning: If you get an even break, you get a fair opportunity to succeed in your ambition or to achieve your goals.
✨For example:
🔹All Monica needs is an even break and she could be one of the country's top models.
🔹He says he's never had an even break in life and that's why he's never achieved much.
📝Variety: This idiom is typically used in American English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Idiom of the Day
📗get a word in edgeways | edgewise
☑️Meaning: If you can't get a word in edgeways, you can't say anything because someone else is talking so much.
✨For example:
🔹Cindy got so excited when she was talking that nobody else could get a word in edgeways.
🔹I'd go to the meetings more often if I could get a word in edgeways.
📝Note: The American form of this idiom is "to get a word in edgewise".
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Idiom of the Day
🔰a necessary evil
☑️Meaning: If you say something is a necessary evil, you don't like it but you understand that it has to be accepted sometimes or it has to exist.
✨For example:
💥Sandra says money's a necessary evil. She thinks it causes many problems, but she can't imagine how the world could work without it.
💥My brother regards exercise as a necessary evil. He hates doing it, but he knows he has to do it if he wants to stay healthy.
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Idiom of the Day
🔰wide of the mark
☑️Meaning: If something is wide of the mark, it isn't true or accurate, or it misses the target.
✨For example:
🔹The manager expected sales to double this year, but his prediction was wide of the mark. They only increased by ten per cent.
🔹Ronaldo's first shot was wide of the mark, but his second one went right into the back of the net for a goal.
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Slang of the Day
🔰meathead
Offensive
☑️Meaning: a stupid person
✨For example:
🔹How did a meathead like that guy get elected to represent the people in his state?
🔹I was watching the tennis yesterday and some meathead yelled out just as Rafael was serving. The security guys found him and threw him out.
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Slang of the Day
🔰jailbait
American and Australian English
☑️Meaning: someone below the legal age of consent
✨For example:
🔹He claims he had no idea the girl was jailbait, and insists that she told him she was nineteen years old.
🔹One of the greatest novels in the English language is about a man who falls for a girl even though he knows she's jailbait. It's called "Lolita".
💧Origin: From the fact that in many countries an adult having sexual contact with an underage partner can be given a jail sentence. The underage partner is "bait" that could lead to jail.
📍Variety: This slang term is typically used in American and Australian English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Phrasal Verb of the Day
🔰end in
✨Meaning: to have a certain result at the end of something
💧For example:
end in sth 👉The two countries couldn't agree on how to solve the problem, so the negotiations ended in a stalemate.
end in sth 👉The U.S. government's policy of making alcohol illegal in the 1920's ended in failure and an increase in organised crime.
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Slang of the Day
🔰pain | pain in the arse | pain in the backside
British and Australian English
☑️Meaning: someone or something that's annoying or troublesome
✨For example:
🔹Pete's new girlfriend is a real pain. She's got this annoying voice, and she never stops talking.
🔹These staff meetings are such a pain in the backside. I don't even know why we have to come.
📜Variety: This slang term is typically used in British and Australian English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Idiom of the Day
📜a quick fix
📍INFORMAL
☑️Meaning: If something is a quick fix, it's a quick and easy, but usually short-term, solution to a problem.
✨For example:
🔹Tania wants to lose weight, but she wants a quick fix like taking a pill instead of eating better and exercising more.
🔹I can tie your car's exhaust pipe up with a bit of wire, but it's just a quick fix. You'll have to get it fixed properly as soon as possible.
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Phrase of the day
📜Can't complain
☑️We use this expression to reply to a question asking how something is, to say there are no big problems.
Written: Yes📍Spoken: Yes📍Formal: No📍Informal: Yes
💧Example 1
🅰️How are you these days? I haven't seen you for ages.
🅱️Can't complain. Still walking five miles a day and going to the gym.
💧Example 2
🅰️How's the course going?
🅱️Can't complain. I keep doing the homework..
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Slang of the Day
🔰weirdo
☑️Meaning: a strange, eccentric or weird person
💧For example:
🔹Back when me and my friends were teenage punk rockers, my grandpa used to say we looked like "bloody weirdos".
🔸Have you ever seen the weirdos who go to those evangelical Christian meetings? They have fits and speak in tongues and play with snakes and do other weird stuff.
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