📔on the fiddle
📋Meaning
Engaged in deceitful, fraudulent, or dishonest means of obtaining money.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣My career will be over if anyone ever finds out I was on the fiddle during my time as the company treasurer.
🗣There are always politicians on the fiddle, looking for ways to use their positions of power to earn a bit more money.
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📔 have known better days
📋Meaning
To be or look particularly shabby, ill-kept, or in poor condition.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣Well, this car has known better days, but it's been reliable for me since the day I bought it 20 years ago.
🗣The poor guy who runs the building is a sweet fellow, but he has certainly known better days by the looks of him.
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📔 pull an all-nighter
📋Meaning
To remain awake all night long, especially so as to study or to complete something.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣I was a bit of a procrastinator in college, so I tended to pull a lot of all-nighters.
🗣Jeff pulled an all-nighter on Thursday to get his report finished for work by the deadline today, so I don't think he'll be coming out with us tonight.
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💠rarer than hens' teeth
✍🏾Incredibly scarce or rare; extremely difficult or impossible to find.
Support for the president is rarer than hens' teeth in this part of the country.
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📔 Lost at sea
📋Meaning
To be confused about something or to feel unsure about what to do.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “I am lost at sea with this new system at work. I just can’t understand it.”
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📔 Sail close to the wind
📋Meaning
To act just within the limits of what’s legal or socially acceptable, to push boundaries.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “They fired their accountant because he sailed too close to the wind.”
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📔 Make a mountain out of a molehill
📋Meaning
To exaggerate the severity of a situation.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “She shouted at him angrily for being five minutes late, but it really didn’t matter that much. She really made a mountain out of a molehill.”
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📔 Gain ground
📋Meaning
To become popular, to make progress, to advance.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “As Airbnb gains ground in many cities all over the world, many locals complain that they can no longer find a place to live. Landlords would rather rent their places out to tourists and earn more money.”
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💠a bridge too far
✍🏾An act or plan whose ambition overreaches its capability, resulting in or potentially leading to difficulty or failure. Taken from the 1974 book A Bridge Too Far by Cornelius Ryan, which details the Allies' disastrous attempts to capture German-controlled bridges in the Netherlands during World War II.
The multi-million-dollar purchase of the small startup proved a bridge too far for the social media company, as the added revenue couldn't make up for the cost in the end.
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📔 poetry in motion
📋Meaning
Something that is very elegant, graceful, and/or beautiful to observe, especially dance or the performing arts.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣The ballet was sublime to watch, truly poetry in motion.
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📔 Down to earth
📋Meaning
To be practical and sensible.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “It’s a stereotype, but Dutch people are known for being down to earth.”
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📔 Salt of the earth
📋Meaning
Being honest and good.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “My father is the salt of the earth. He works hard and always helps people who are in need.”
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📔 Break the ice
📋Meaning
To attempt to become friends with someone.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “He made a weather joke to break the ice.”
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📔 Sell ice to Eskimos
📋Meaning
To be able to sell anything to anyone; to persuade people to go against their best interests or to accept something unnecessary or preposterous.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “He’s a gifted salesman, he could sell ice to Eskimos."
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📔 Pour oil on troubled waters
📋Meaning
To try to make people feel better and become friendly again after an argument.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “She hated seeing her two best friends arguing, so she got them together and poured oil on troubled waters.”
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📔 Make waves
📋Meaning
To cause trouble, to change things in a dramatic way.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “She likes to make waves with her creative marketing campaigns. They get a lot of attention from customers.”
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📔 Go with the flow
📋Meaning
To relax and go along with whatever’s happening.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “Quite often in life, good things happen when you don’t make plans. Just go with the flow and see what happens!”
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📔 window-shop
📋Meaning
To visit stores, typically only looking in their windows, to see what is available without buying anything.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣A: "Let's go shopping!" B: "I would, but my bank account is so sad these days." A: "OK, let's just window-shop then!"
🗣A: "You guys really went in that expensive boutique?" B: "Yeah, but we were only window-shopping. We know we can't afford anything in there!"
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📔 against the collar
📋Meaning
Difficult, exhausting, or problematic. The phrase originates from the collar on a horse's harness, which tightens on the horse's neck when it travels uphill. Primarily heard in UK.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣I was doing fine in the marathon, but it was a bit against the collar for the last couple miles.
🗣I don't think I have time to meet you today. Work has been a bit against the collar recently.
🗣against the collar recently.Getting this late-breaking story finished in time for tomorrow's newspaper was somewhat against the collar, but it's done now, thankfully.
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📔 out of humour
📋Meaning
In an irritable, grouchy, or unhappy mood; not feeling well or in good spirits. Primarily heard in UK.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣I think something is bugging John because he's been rather out of humour lately.
🗣After living in Gibraltar for so long, these awful London winters leave me feeling me out of humour.
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📔 Walking on air
📋Meaning
Very excited or happy. “Over the moon,” “on cloud nine,” “in seventh heaven” and “in good spirits”
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “She’s been walking on air since she found out that she’s pregnant.”
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📔 Many moons ago
📋Meaning
This is one of those English expressions that’s a little bit formal or dated. You’ll most likely hear it in stories, or when someone is trying to create a dramatic effect.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “Many moons ago, we used to be two very close friends. Now we’ve gone separate ways and lost contact.”
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📔 Castle in the sky
📋Meaning
A daydream, a hope, especially for one’s life, that’s unlikely to come true.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “World traveling used to be a castle in the sky for most people a few decades ago, but with cheap flight tickets and the global use of English, many youngsters are living that dream.”
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💠 hot tip
✍🏾 A piece of advice or information that is timely and helpful, especially if acted upon quickly.
We received a hot tip that the suspect is on his way to the border.
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📔 one-up (someone)
📋Meaning
To make a point of outdoing, outperforming, outclassing, etc., someone.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣I hate telling stories around Jack because he always tries to one-up you with some fabulous anecdote of his own.
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📔 tear a strip off (someone)
📋Meaning
To scold, upbraid, or rebuke someone very severely, as for an error or wrongdoing.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣The teacher really tore a strip off me for causing a disruption in class again.
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📔lap of the gods
📋A state beyond possible human control, intervention, or responsibility; a state or condition that is or will be decided by nature or fate. Usually used in the phrase "in the lap of the gods."
🗣I'm afraid we've done all we can to treat your father's heart attack. His recovery is in the lap of the gods, now.
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💠collect dust
✍🏾To be in a state of disuse for a prolonged period of time.
Why do you want another video game console? You already have three collecting dust under the television!
My father has lots of old trinkets and memorabilia collecting dust in the attic.
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