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🍂The secret of your future is hidden in your daily routine.

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🍂You are remembered for the rules you break.

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Slang of the Day
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Slang of the Day
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Slang of the Day
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Phrase of the day

📒I can't put my finger on it📒

📝We use this expression to say that we can't explain or fully understand something.

Written: ✖️Spoken: ✔️Formal: ✖️Informal: ✔️

💥Example1️⃣
🅰️She looks different, doesn't she?
🅱️Yes, I can't put my finger on it. Has she changed her hair?

💥Example 2️⃣
🅰️Why don't you like Sam?
🅱️I don't know. I can't put my finger on it. I just feel we can't trust him.
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Slang of the Day

📌busted

☑️Meaning: to be charged with a criminal offence

💧For example:

➖Our neighbours were busted for possessing marijuana and speed pills after the cops raided their house last night.

➖The cops raided a bar in Washington and the president's daughter was busted for under-age drinking. She was let off with a warning.
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Slang of the Day

📌jet set

📝Meaning: a class of rich, fashionable people who travel for pleasure

📍For example:

🔺Ever since she saw Princess Caroline of Monaco and her friends at Cannes, Josephine's goal in life has been to join the jet set.

🔺He used to be proud of his working-class roots, but since becoming a super-rich rock star he's felt much more at home in the jet set.

✔️Note:
1. usually used with the definite article "the" 2. can also be used as an adjective, as in "the jet-set crowd" or "jet-set destinations"

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Slang of the Day

🔰mega

📂Meaning: very big; extremely

📌For example:

🔺Those guys who started software companies back in the seventies are mega rich by now.

🔺The Beatles were one of the mega bands of the century, for sure.

✔️Note: also used as a prefix, as in "megabucks" and "megastore"
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Slang of the Day

🔰cock-up
🇬🇧British English Offensive

☑️Meaning: a big mistake, something done badly

📍For example:

➖We got some guy in to fix the water heater, but he's made a total cock-up of it. We still haven't got any hot water.

➖Did you see our newspaper advertisement with the wrong phone number in it? What a cock-up!

💥Variety: This slang term is typically used in British English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Idiom of the Day

🔰all hell broke loose
💧INFORMAL

☑️Meaning: You can say "all hell broke loose" if a situation suddenly became violent or chaotic.

📍For example:

🔺I was walking through the station on my way to work when I heard this huge explosion, and then all hell broke loose.

🔺Everything was fine in the club until someone yelled, "Fire!" and then all hell broke loose as people started running and screaming and pushing each other.
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#Phrase_of_the_day

🔰That's quite something

💢We use this expression to show we are impressed by something special we have seen or heard.

💥Example 1
My cousin started his own company and was a millionaire by the age of 20.
That's quite something, isn't it?

💥Example 2
What do you think of this Van Gogh painting? Do you like it?
It's quite something, isn't it? I love the colours and the flowers.

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Slang of the Day
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#Idiom_of_the_Day
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🔰Idiom of the Day
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🔰Idiom of the Day
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Idiom of the Day

🔰at a loose end
🇬🇧British English

☑️Meaning: If you're at a loose end, you have nothing to do.

📍For example:

🔺If I'm ever at a loose end, I look for a good book to read.

🔺Give me a call if you're at a loose end and we'll go and do something.

💥Note: This is similar to the American idiom "at loose ends", though the American idiom seems to indicate a state of unhappy restlessness that results from having nothing to do, while the British idiom simply means having nothing to do.

✨Variety: This idiom is typically used in British English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Idiom of the Day

🔰quaking in your boots

☑️Meaning: If you're quaking in your boots, you are very frightened.

📍For example:

🔺This big, ugly dog was growling at me and baring its teeth. I was quaking in my boots, I can tell you!

🔺Our sergeant was a scary guy. He could make a new army recruit quake in his boots just by looking at him.
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Idiom of the Day

🔰in deep water

☑️Meaning: If you're in deep water, you're in some sort of trouble or in a difficult situation.

📍For example:

➖The company's in deep water now that the tax inspectors have decided to check over the accounts.

➖Many families are in deep water because of the mortgage crisis, and some might even lose their homes.

💥Origin: Probably metaphorical, and related to the fact that deep water can be very dangerous, especially if someone can't swim.
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Idiom of the Day

🔰quality time

🖍Meaning: If you spend quality time with someone, you spend time doing things that enrich your lives and improve your relationship.

💧For example:

➖This book says parents should spend quality time with their kids every day, and not just sit in the same room watching TV with them before sending them to bed.

➖Most people work so much these days that they don't have the chance to spend enough quality time with their friends and family.
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Idiom of the Day

📌at your wits' end

〽️Meaning: If you're at your wits' end, you're upset and frustrated because you've tried everything you can think of to solve a problem, and nothing has worked.

✔️For example:

🔺I'm at my wits' end! I've been trying to solve a problem with some software all morning and I still haven't got it to work!

🔺Kelvin says he's been trying to get tickets for the game all day, but he's at his wits' end. Nobody's got any left.
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Phrasal Verb of the Day

📗factor in

📝Meaning: to include a certain item when calculating or planning something

➕Synonym: consider, include

📌For example:

🔸factor in sth ▪️Don't forget to factor in transport costs when you make the quotation.

🔹factor sth in ▫️You need to factor the political situation in when deciding on a country to invest in.
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Phrase of the day

〽️Take five.
📝We use this expression to tell people to stop doing an activity and relax for a period of about five minutes.

Written: No📍Spoken: Yes📍Formal: No📍Informal: Yes

📌Example 1
🅰️Can we stop for a break soon, please?
🅱️Sure, take five, everybody.

📌Example 2
🅰️Well done, guys. You’ve worked hard. Let’s take five.
🅱️Anyone want a drink of water?
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