📔 A smart cookie
📋Meaning
Here’s an easy one. A smart cookie is an intelligent person.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “It shouldn’t be hard too hard for a smart cookie like you to learn Spanish.”
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📔 Packed like sardines
📋Meaning
What do you see when you open up a can of sardines? Yes, the fish crammed inside the can. So packed like sardines describes a place or situation that’s very crowded with people (or animals)—for example, a concert hall or sports event.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “Were you at the football game last night? The stadium was packed like sardines.”
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📔 be tied (up) in knots
📋Meaning
To be confused, anxious, worried, and/or upset (about something).
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣I've been tied up in knots trying to come up with a good topic for my term paper, but I just can't think of anything!
🗣James is tied in knots over how to break up with Danielle, but I think he needs to bite the bullet and just do it.
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📔money laundering
📋Meaning
The criminal act or practice of processing large amounts of money obtained through illegitimate or illegal means, often in small increments through banks or other legitimate businesses, so as to conceal its source or origins.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣One of the clubs downtown was shut down last week on charges of suspected money laundering for a local criminal enterprise.
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📔 salad years
📋Meaning
A carefree time of youthful innocence, ingenuousness, and inexperience. A variant of the more common term "salad days," which comes from Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣I thought that I had experienced true romantic love back in my salad years, before I graduated. Now, however, I think love is largely an elaborate delusion.
🗣Whenever I ask my grandfather the meaning of a word I hear on TV, he always laughs and says he'll tell me when I'm no longer in my salad years.
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📔 shed a tear
📋Meaning
To cry or weep, especially from grief; to grieve or mourn in general.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣Everyone in the room was shedding tears by the end of the ceremony.
🗣Their relationship had soured so much over the years that John didn't shed a tear when he heard of his brother's death.
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📔 now (someone) has gone and done it
📋Meaning
Someone has just done something very grave, foolish, and/or irreparable.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣"Now you've gone and done it! My mother's gonna tan our hides for breaking that!
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📔 ball the jack
📋Meaning
Speed up. Go fast. This phrase came from the American rail industry, in which a train was nicknamed a "jack," while "highball" meant to proceed.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣A: "Come on Tom, pick up the pace, ball the jack, let's move!" B: "Ugh, I can't run any faster this early in the morning!"
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📔 When it rains, it pours
📋Meaning
Bad things occur in large numbers, but many big things happen all at once.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “First he was laid off, then his wife got into a car accident. When it rains, it pours.“
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📔 Chasing rainbows
📋Meaning
Following dreams, trying to do something that can’t be achieved.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “His paintings have neither style nor imagination, but he insists on being a professional painter. He’s always chasing rainbows.”
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📔 Rain or shine
📋Meaning
Used to indicate that something will happen no matter what. This is one of the rare idioms that’s also often used literally, for outdoor events that’ll take place whether it rains or not.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “I’ll see you at the airport, rain or shine.”
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📔 Under the sun
📋Meaning
Refers to everything on Earth, usually used as part of a superlative.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “Gili Trawangan must be one of the most beautiful islands under the sun.”
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📔 Once in a blue moon
📋Meaning
Very rarely.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “He used to call his grandma once in a blue moon. Now that she has passed away, he regrets not making more of an effort to keep in touch.”
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📔 Every cloud has a silver lining
📋Meaning
There’s a good aspect to every bad situation.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “Don’t worry about losing your job. It’ll be okay. Every cloud has a silver lining!“
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📔measure the drapes
📋To begin planning or preparing to replace someone in a job or position before one has actually secured the role, especially during a political election.
🗣The senator has been criticized for measuring the drapes in the Oval Office with a month still to go before the votes will be tallied.
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📔 A bad apple
📋Meaning
Imagine a basket of apples with one rotten apple inside. This picture will help you remember that a bad apple is someone who creates problems or trouble, or is a bad influence on the other people in a group.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “Instead of focusing on college, he spends his time hanging out with bad apples.”
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📔 Buy a lemon
📋Meaning
To buy a lemon means to buy something (usually a motor vehicle) that doesn’t work well and is therefore worthless.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “The car looked so new and shiny I had no way of knowing I was buying a lemon.”
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📔 Have a sweet tooth
📋Meaning
Do you like eating cakes, candy and other sweet-tasting food? If you do, then you can say you have a sweet tooth.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “Yes, I definitely have a sweet tooth. I can never walk past a bakery and not stop to buy myself a slice of chocolate cake.”
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📔 A storm is brewing
📋Meaning
There will be trouble or emotional upset in the near future.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “She decided to go ahead with their wedding, even though all they’ve been doing lately is arguing. I can sense a storm is brewing.”
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📔 Calm before the storm
📋Meaning
An unusually quiet period before a period of upheaval (problems, chaos).
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “The strange quietness in town made her feel peaceful. Little did she know, it was just the calm before the storm.”
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📔 Weather a storm
📋Meaning
To survive a dangerous event or effectively deal with a difficult situation.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “Last year, they had some financial difficulties when her husband was fired. Together, they weathered the storm and figured out how to keep going.”
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📔 take a bawling out
📋Meaning
To receive a very severe rebuke, chastisement, or scolding (from someone).
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣I sure took a bawling out from my parents after I smashed up their car.
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📔 be smashed to smithereens
📋Meaning
To be broken apart or otherwise destroyed into tiny, fragmentary pieces. "Smithereens," first appearing in English in 1829 as "smiddereens," is likely derived from the Irish word "smidirín" or "smidiríní," meaning "fragment."
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣I wish I could still go visit our old family home, but it's already been smashed to smithereens by the demolition crew.
🗣The village was smashed to smithereens by the typhoon's gale-force winds.
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💠 hunt where the ducks are
✍🏾 To pursue or look for one's objectives, results, or goals in the place where one is most likely to find them.
If you're looking to expand your customer base, you need to identify who would benefit from your business the most and then hunt where the ducks are
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📔high muckety muck
📋slang An especially important, influential, and authoritative person, especially someone who is overbearingly or arrogantly so.
🗣We're just waiting for the high muckety muck to give us the green light before we get the project started.
🗣"All hail the high muckety muck," Jerry muttered under his breath as the dictator's motorcade rolled by.
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📔 close as the bark to the tree
📋Meaning
As connected as is possible. Often used to describe a particularly intimate relationship or friendship.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣Jenna and Elise are as close as the bark to the tree—I rarely see one without the other!
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📔 pound sand
📋Meaning
To engage in pointless, menial efforts or labor. Used especially as an imperative to express disdain, contempt, or dismissal.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣I can't believe Sam told his teacher to go pound sand. Where does that kid get such attitude?
🗣Charles, why don't you pound sand instead of coming around here hassling me about my business?
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