Phrase of the day
4th April 2017
❇️Put it this way
✅We use this expression to summarise a position that is probably quite extreme.
Written: Yes❗️Spoken: Yes❗️Formal: No❗️Informal: Yes
💧Example 1
🅰️Was she rude to you?
🅱️Put it this way - if she was a man, I would have punched her.
💧Example 2
🅰️Is it important?
🅱️Put it this way, if we don't do it, we'll go out of business.
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Phrasal Verb of the Day
➡️let up⬅️
☑️Meaning: to become weaker or to become less intense
🔺For example:
let up 🔹The rain is still heavy, so let's wait here until it lets up a bit.
let up 🔹The pressure at work won't let up until we've signed the contract for this deal.
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Idiom of the Day
✳️the upper hand
⏱ Mon, 27 Mar 2017
☑️Meaning: If you have the upper hand, you have the advantage or you're in the stronger position in a contest or a conflict.
🔺For example:
🔸With one race to go, the Ferrari team has the upper hand. If they get one of the top three places in the last race, they'll win this year's title.
🔸For many years Yahoo was the top search engine, but for the last few years Google has had the upper hand.
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Phrase of the day
⭕️For a start / for starters
☑️We use this expression to give the main reason for something, either positive or negative, when there are several reasons for it.
Written:
Yes
Spoken:
Yes
Formal:
No
Informal:
Yes
Example 1⃣
🅰Why didn't you come out with us last night? We had a great time.
🅱Well, I don't have much money for a start. And I don't like some of the people there.
Example 2⃣
🅰Why don't you like that restaurant?
🅱The service is slow, for starters. And they don't have much variety.
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Phrasal Verb of the Day
🔘lighten up
⭕️INFORMAL
☑️Meaning: to become less serious or more easy-going
▶️For example:
🔹My boss is so serious all the time. I wish she'd lighten up and joke around with us sometimes.
🔹Salima said that if Kareem doesn't lighten up and learn to have some fun, she'll stop seeing him and look for someone else.
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Phrasal Verb of the Day
✳️Crowd Around
✍The phrasal verb 'crowd around' describes when people surround someone or something, especially because they want to see what is happening.
People usually 'crowd around' when someone has been injured, if there is something interesting or exciting to see, or if they are trying to hear someone speak.
🎈Here are some example sentences:
🔹The children were crowding around the small mouse, trying to see whether it was still alive or not.
🔹The followers crowded around their leader to hear him speak.
⭕️The noun 'crowd' is a group of people who have gathered together to do something.
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Idiom of the Day
⏱Today: Fri, 17 Mar 2017
✳️right up your street
🇬🇧British English
☑️Meaning: If something is right up your street, it would be perfect for you or ideal for your skills and interests.
▶️For example:
💥I've found a job that should be right up Humphrey's street. It's writing for a cricket magazine, so he could use his writing skills and his knowledge of cricket.
💥I thought a tour of German castles would be right up your street, Sarah.
💠Note: The idioms "right down your alley" and "right up your alley" have the same meaning, but they're used more in American English.
🔰Variety: This idiom is typically used in British English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Phrase of the day
✳️Same here
✅We use this expression to say we agree with someone about something.
Written:
No✖️
Spoken:
Yes✔️
Formal:
No✖️
Informal:
Yes✔️
🔹Example 1⃣
🅰I thought the film was brilliant, and the music was great too.
🅱Same here.
🔹Example 2⃣
🅰I really like relaxing holidays where I just lie on the beach all day.
🅱Same here. I don't like visiting museums and stuff like that.
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Phrasal Verb of the Day
⭕️work on
☑️Meaning: to spend time making, fixing or improving something
▶️For example:
1⃣work on sth 🔹Alfred would work on a movie's screenplay for months before starting to shoot the movie.
2⃣work on doing sth 🔹If you work on improving your English conversation skills, you should be ready for promotion in a couple of months.
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Idiom of the Day
⏱Today: Fri, 10 Mar 2017
⭕️jump down your throat | jump all over you
☑️Meaning: If someone jumps down your throat, or jumps all over you, they strongly criticise you or scold you.
▶️For example:
🔹All I did was come twenty minutes late, and the manager jumped down my throat. I don't understand why he got so mad.
🔹Janie's parents jumped all over her for forgetting to call them and tell them she'd be getting home late.
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Phrase of the day
⏱Today: Thu, 9th March 2017
📚(It's) about time
📝We use this expression to say we feel something should have happened much earlier.
Written:
Yes✅
Spoken:
Yes✅
Formal:
No❎
Informal:
Yes✅
▶️Example 1⃣
🅰Here's the letter you asked me to write.
🅱It's about time! I asked you for that ages ago!
Sorry.
▶️Example 2⃣
🅰They've finished the new supermarket in the city centre.
🅱About time! They were working on it for years!
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Phrase of the day
8th March 2017
✳️It's (just) not me
☑️We use this expression to say something does not suit us or is not right for us.
Written:
Yes✅
Spoken:
Yes✅
Formal:
No❎
Informal:
Yes✅
▶️Example 1⃣
🅰Don't you like those trousers?
🅱I tried them on, but they're just not me. Yellow is not my colour.
▶️Example 2⃣
🅰If you were a lawyer you could earn a fortune.
🅱Maybe, but that's just not me. I couldn't stand the stress of a job like that.
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Idiom of the Day
✳️another string to your bow
🇬🇧British English
Today: Wed, 08 Mar 2017
☑️Meaning: If you have another string to your bow, you have another way of making a living.
▶️For example:
🔹Lots of people learn to teach English so they'll have another string to their bow.
🔹I've lost my job and I'll have to retrain for something else. I wish I already had another string to my bow.
💥Origin: Probably metaphorical, from the fact that if an archer has a spare string for their bow, they can still shoot an arrow even if their first string breaks.
🎯Variety: This idiom is typically used in British English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Slang of the Day
✳️Frenemy
▶️Example: Zack is John’s frenemy. They get a long in the office but both of them work on internal competing teams.
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Phrasal Verb of the Day
❇️pull off
💢Meaning: to succeed in doing something difficult
🔺For example:
pull off sth 🔹James has just pulled off one of the biggest deals of his career.
pull sth off 🔹Nobody thought Lleyton could win the match, but he pulled it off with pure determination.
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Slang of the Day
⭕️weed
☑️Meaning: marijuana, cannabis
🔺For example:
🎈You been smokin' that weed again? Your eyes are real red, dude!
🎈Smoking weed used to make me feel a bit scared and crazy sometimes, so I gave it up.
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Phrase of the day
📕It's worth a try
☑️We use this expression to say that it's a good idea to try something.
👉Written: Yes✅ Spoken: Yes✅ Formal: No❎ Informal: Yes✅
🔺Example 1
🅰️Pete's not at home. Do you think I should call Ruth? He might be there?
🅱️It's worth a try. They are often together.
🔺Example 2
🅰️It would be great to have a day off next Monday. Shall we ask the boss if we can?
🅱️It's worth a try. He might say yes.
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Slang of the Day
✳️threads
🇺🇸American English
☑️Meaning: clothes
For example:
🔹Check out Terry's new threads. He looks really sharp in that outfit.
🔹Those threads Jack's wearing look pretty expensive.
💥Note: usually refers to men's clothes
⭕️Variety: This slang term is typically used in American English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Idiom of the Day
📚ill at ease
✅Meaning: If you're ill at ease, you feel tense or you can't relax in a situation.
▶️For example:
✳️Liam always looks ill at ease when he's being interviewed on T.V.
✳️I don't mean to make people feel ill at ease, but I seem to have that effect on some people.
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Phrase of the day
⏱20th March 2017
✳️Some hope
✅We use this expression to say we think something is pretty impossible.
Written:
No
Spoken:
Yes
Formal:
No
Informal:
Yes
Example 1⃣
🅰Do you think I can speak English perfectly in three months?
🅱Some hope! I've been learning for ten years and I still can't speak fluently.
Example 2⃣
🅰Do you think we'll win the match on Saturday?
🅱Some hope! Our team is playing rubbish at the moment.
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Slang of the Day
🔘oi!
🇬🇧British English
☑️Meaning: a sound used to attract someone's attention, like "hey!"
▶️For example:
🔹The coach noticed that some of his players weren't listening, so he said, "Oi! Are you lads listening to me, or what?"
🔹"Oi, Benny! How you goin' mate?"
💥Note: "Oi!" (with an exclamation mark) is also the name of a style of British punk rock music enjoyed mostly by skinheads. Well-known Oi! bands include Cocksparrer, The Templars, The Press, Sham 69, Blitz, Cockney Rejects, Argy Bargy, The Bruisers and The Partisans.
🎯Origin: Possibly short for "hoi polloi", which is Greek for "the many" or "the masses". "Hoi polloi" was borrowed into English in the nineteenth century and now means "the working class" or "the lower class". Because "oi" has traditionally been used by working-class people, it's possible that it originated as an abbreviation of "hoi polloi" in order to signify a fellow member of the working classes.
⭕️Variety: This slang term is typically used in British English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Phrasal Verb of the Day
✳️knuckle down
⭕️INFORMAL
☑️Meaning: If you knuckle down, you start to take your work or your task seriously and do it properly.
▶️For example:
1⃣knuckle down 🔹The exams start next month, so I guess it's time I knuckled down and studied a bit harder.
2⃣knuckle down 🔹If Sammy wants to lose weight, he'll have to knuckle down and start exercising more at the gym.
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Phrase of the day
13th March 2017
✳️In a word, no
☑️We use this expression to summarise our negative feelings or to give a short negative answer
Written:
No❎
Spoken:
Yes✅
Formal:
No❎
Informal:
Yes✅
Example 1⃣
🅰Did you enjoy your meal?
🅱In a word, no. It was too hot, the vegetables were overcooked and the sauce was terrible.
Example 2⃣
🅰Is Marie going to help us this afternoon?
🅱In a word, no. She gave me a long explanation about why she can't be with us this time.
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Phrase of the day
✳️Hit the sheets
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Slang of the Day
Today: Fri, 10 Mar 2017
⭕️uncool
✅Meaning: not good, not acceptable, not fashionable
▶️For example:
🔹My kids think it's uncool to be dropped off at a party by their parents, so they get me to drop them off a few houses away so their friends can't see.
🔹Doesn't Kerry know that it's uncool to smoke in other people's apartments these days?
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Phrasal Verb of the Day
make out (1⃣)
⏱Today: Thu, 09 Mar 2017
☑️Meaning: to see or hear something, but only with difficulty
▶️For example:
1⃣make sth out 💥This person's handwriting is really difficult to read. I can't understand this word here. Can you make it out?
2⃣make out sth 💥If you can't make out what someone's saying, ask them to repeat it.
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Phrasal Verb of the Day
📕associate with
Today: Wed, 08 Mar 2017
☑️Meaning: If you associate with someone, you regularly spend time with them.
▶️For example:
1⃣associate with sb 🔹While my brother was in New York in the late 70's, he associated with lots of punk musicians and underground artists.
2⃣associate with sb 🔹If Terry associates with other criminals, he'll be sent back to jail again.
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Phrase of the day
⏱7th March 2017
✳️And that's that/and that's final
☑️We use this expression to say we definitely won't change a decision we have made.
Written:
Yes✅
Spoken:
Yes✅
Formal:
No❎
Informal:
Yes✅
💥Example 1
🅰Can I go out with Kenny tonight? He's going to the cinema.
🅱No, you're going to stay and help me, and that's final.
💥Example 2
🅰Everybody has got an MP3 player at school! I want one.
🅱Well I'm not buying you one now, and that's that.
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Phrasal Verb of the Day
⭕️believe in
✅Meaning: If you believe in something, you're sure that it's true or it really exists.
▶️For example:
1⃣believe in sth 🔹Not many people in Europe believe in ghosts, but many people in Asia do.
2⃣believe in sth 🔹Mahatma Gandhi believed in the power of non-violent protest.
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