✳️go to bed with the chickens
Ⓜ️to go to bed very early
🔹My grandfather always goes to bed with the chickens because he works on a farm.
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#Idiom_of_the_Day
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📗a fait accompli
📍FORMAL
☑️Meaning: If something is a fait accompli, it is certain to happen.
✨For example:
➖We know the judge in this case has been paid off by the defendant, so the verdict is a fait accompli.
➖People are acting as if the result of tomorrow's election is a fait accompli, but do you really think it's already decided?
💥Origin: "Fait accompli" is one of many French words and phrases that have been "borrowed" by English. A direct translation would be "an accomplished fact".
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#R
📕Ride High📕
✅it means to be successful at something or to feel good and happy at a certain time.
▶️For example:
🎯They finished their final exams and were riding high thinking about their summer holidays ahead.
🎯Their success in the trials had them riding high and excited for the main competition.
🎯After the proposal, the newly engaged couple were riding high. They couldn’t wait to tell their friends and family.
🎯I’ve been riding high ever since I got the promotion in work.
🎯The football team is riding high this year, they have won every home game and are certain to win the championship.
https://goo.gl/G1uf4m
Here is a dialogue with the idiom ride high:👇👇👇
📗You can say that again!
📍INFORMAL
☑️Meaning: If someone says "You can say that again!", it shows they strongly agree with what was just said.
💧For example:
🔹Jean: "Phew! It's really hot today." Louis: "You can say that again!"
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🔰off your own bat
🇬🇧British English
☑️Meaning: If you do something off your own bat, you do it without being asked to or told to.
✨For example:
➖I didn't tell the gardener to cut down the tree. He did it off his own bat.
➖One of the actresses decided, off her own bat, to change her lines in the movie. The director wasn't happy.
💥Origin: Possibly related to the game of cricket, in which a player scores runs by hitting the ball "off his own bat".
📗Variety: This idiom is typically used in British English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Today's Idiom
💥worth its weight in gold
✅Meaning: If something is worth its weight in gold, it's extremely valuable or extremely useful.
🔹For example:
➖Your grandmother's stories are worth their weight in gold, so you should try to record them or write them down.
➖A personal recommendation from someone like Professor Clark is worth its weight in gold. You'll be able to get a job anywhere you like with that.
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Idioms using numbers
11 number idioms
Take a look at these idioms; they all use numbers.
One-horse town
This idiom is used to describe a town or village that is very small; it has a small population. The image is that nothing ever happens in the town; it is boring and quiet.
'I grew up in a one-horse town. I moved away at the first chance I had.'
Two left feet
To have two left feet means that you have terrible coordination in your movements and terrible balance. You would be a bad dancer or footballer.
'Don't ask me to dance, I have two left feet!'
Two's company; three's a crowd
This idiom is used to mean that two is the best amount of people to go somewhere - three people is too many. It is usually used when a boyfriend and girlfriend want to do something together without anyone else.
'I don't think I'll come to the cinema with you and your new girlfriend because two's company and three's a crowd.'
On all fours
When you are on all fours you are crawling on your hands and knees like a baby.
'I got down on all fours trying to find the coin I had dropped.'
Take five
When we take five we take a short break. The five refers to five minutes, so we're taking a 5 minute break.
'I'm tired of walking, let's take five.'
At sixes and sevens
We use this British English expression when are confused or in a state of disorder.
'The government were at sixes and sevens over what to do about the unemployment rate.'
Seventh heaven
To be in seventh heaven means to be very, very happy about something
'She was in seventh heaven when she watched her favourite band play live.'
Pieces of eight
This phrase is used to describe money. Pieces of eight were old Spanish coins. The coin was worth eight reales. You might hear this expression in historical pirate movies.
"In Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End the Pirate Lords must meet together by presenting the 'Nine Pieces of Eight'."
On cloud nine
Like seventh heaven, this expression is used when someone feels very happy because of something great that has happened to them.
'She's been on cloud nine since since her boyfriend proposed to her.'
Perfect ten
A perfect ten is used to describe something that couldn't get any better - it is already perfect.
'Have you heard the new Madonna record? I love it. I think it's a perfect ten!'
At the eleventh-hour
This idiom is used when something happens at the last possible moment just before the deadline or end.
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#Number_Idioms
🔰an acid test
✔️Meaning: An acid test is something that shows the true worth or value of something or someone.
🔺For example:
▪️Our new player has been doing well at training and in practice matches, but the acid test will come in her first real match.
▪️The new political party is doing better and better in the polls, but the acid test will be the next election.
〽️Origin: Possibly related to the fact that a test involving acid has been used for over a century to prove that a metal that looks like gold is, or is not, really gold.
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🔰tighten your belt
☑️Meaning: If you tighten your belt, you try to spend less money.
💧For example:
🔹I'll have to tighten my belt for a while so I can pay off my debts.
🔹Pablo says his family have had to tighten their belts because everything costs much more now.
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🔰fall from grace
☑️Meaning: If you fall from grace, you do something that results in a loss of respect and support, especially among those who influence your life or career.
✨For example:
➖The company's vice-president was expected to take over the company until he fell from grace after being arrested for stealing company funds.
➖It's been sad watching so many athletes fall from grace and have their records deleted from the record books for taking performance-enhancing drugs like steroids.
💥Note:
This idiom can also be used in the form of a noun phrase, as in "Mike's fall from grace was quite spectacular".
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🔰forty winks
INFORMAL
☑️Meaning: If you have forty winks, you have a short sleep, or a nap.
✨For example:
🔹If I have a late night I sometimes catch forty winks on the train on the way to work.
🔹If you're driving on a long trip and you feel yourself getting sleepy, stop and have forty winks. It might save your life, and the lives of other people too.
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📗Join the club!
💢Meaning: You can say "Join the club!" to someone who has just experienced something unpleasant that you've also experienced, or to someone
who's in an unfortunate position that's similar to your own.
💧For example:
🔹You were conned by a bank into taking out a mortgage, and now they own your home? Join the club! We lost ours last month.
🔹Peter: "Bobby here just got sacked because a machine can do his job cheaper." Paul: "Yeah? Join the club, Bobby!"
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🔰all the rage
➖INFORMAL
☑️Meaning: If something is all the rage, it's very popular or it's in fashion at the moment.
🔹For example:
➖Can you remember when disco was all the rage and we'd go dancing all night in the clubs?
➖When Hans was a kid, skate boards were all the rage.
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🔰a kick in the teeth
✅Meaning: If you get a kick in the teeth, something bad happens to you or you feel that you've been treated poorly.
🔹For example:
➖I'd just lost my job, so hearing that I had to move out of my apartment as well was a real kick in the teeth.
➖Gerry said that being told to get out of his apartment was a kick in the teeth after spending so much on doing it up.
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