💥To sit down with.
☑️This means to spend time with someone in order to discuss something.
💥I'm screwed.
☑️This means that one is doomed, is in big trouble, or has made a huge mistake.
💥I'll bet.
☑️This is a hyperbolic or sarcastic way of saying "certainly" or "of course".
💥Who knows.
☑️This is a hyperbolic or sarcastic way of saying "I don't have any idea or clue".
💥This is a piece of cake!
☑️This means a task will be easy.
💥Put your eye on it.
☑️This means to watch or monitor something or a person/persons closely and carefully.
💥Wear your heart on your sleeve, To air your dirty laundry.
☑️This means to be open, maybe too open, about your feelings in the public, or to talk to other people about personal things that you should keep private.
@idiomsland
⭕️Top 10 Most Common Idiomatic Expressions with ‘Like’
💥Sleep like a log
✅Sleep very deeply, sleep very well
💥Sell like hotcakes
✅Sell very well, very quickly
💥Like a fish out of water
✅Completely out of place, not belonging at all
💥Feel like a million
✅Feel very happy
💥Like a bump on a log
✅Do not react in a useful of helpful way to the activities around them
💥Read someone like a book
✅Know exactly someone’s thinking or feelings without having to ask
💥Watch someone like a Hawk
✅Watch someone very carefully, especially because you expect them to do something wrong
💥Fit like a glove
✅It fits exactly
💥Eat like a bird
✅Eat only small amount of food
💥Know someone or something like the back of one’s hand
✅Know very well, in every detail
@idiomsland
✳️Back to the drawing board
☑️When an attempt fails and it's time to start all over.
✳️Ball is in your court
☑️It is up to you to make the next decision or step
✳️Barking up the wrong tree
☑️Looking in the wrong place. Accusing the wrong person
✳️Be glad to see the back of
☑️Be happy when a person leaves.
✳️Beat around the bush
☑️Avoiding the main topic. Not speaking directly about the issue.
✳️Best of both worlds
☑️Meaning: All the advantages.
✳️Best thing since sliced bread
☑️A good invention or innovation. A good idea or plan.
✳️Bite off more than you can chew
☑️To take on a task that is way to big.
✳️Blessing in disguise
☑️Something good that isn't recognized at first.
✳️Burn the midnight oil
☑️To work late into the night, alluding to the time before electric lighting.
@idiomsland
#B
🔹Example sentences from the web:
✳️He loved his garden and maintained it with great care. It was a real labour of love and it was a pleasure watching him work in the garden.
✳️To establish a field site and balance research with family life was a labor of love: my wife, Claudia Valeggia, a biological anthropologist as well, was beginning her field research on the reproductive ecology of the Toba-Qom indigenous communities of northern Argentina.
🔹Example sentences from the web:
✳️I don’t know, and I don’t care, because he just got every single one of us off the hook.
✳️I guess she thought she could use your file and pathetic past to get you off the hook.
✳️He counted on his friends to get him off the hook.
💥A bit much
🔹If something is excessive or annoying, it is a bit much.
💥A chain is no stronger than its weakest link
🔹This means that processes, organisations, etc, are vulnerable because the
weakest person or part can always damage or break them.
💥A day late and a dollar short
🔹(USA) If something is a day late and a dollar short, it is too little, too late.
💥A fool and his money are soon parted
🔹This idiom means that people who aren't careful with their money spend it quickly. 'A fool and his money are easily parted' is an alternative form of the idiom.
@IDIOMSLAND
#A
⭕️sell like hot cakes
🔹Things that sell like hot cakes sell quickly or in large quantities.
▶️"She's a very successful author. Her books always sell like hot cakes."
@IDIOMSLAND
#C
✳️about turn/about face
☑️This term refers to a complete change of opinion or policy.
💥"The ambassador's recent declarations indicate an about turn in foreign policy."
🔘make a killing
☑️Meaning: If you make a killing, you make a lot of money from a sale or a deal of some sort.
🔹For example:
💥My aunt made a killing when she bought some shares in a company as soon as they were issued, and sold them a few weeks later for three times what she paid.
💥Lots of people made a killing when property values went so high back in the nineties.
@IdiomsLand
#M
📕a mixed blessing
✅Meaning: You can say something is a mixed blessing if it seems to be good, but in fact has bad effects as well as good effects.
🔹For example:
✳️Many scientists said discovering the power of the atom was a mixed blessing as it led to nuclear power, but it also made nuclear weapons possible.
✳️Getting the promotion was a mixed blessing because it means I spend less time with my family.
@IdiomsLand
#M
🔘a matter of life and death
☑️Meaning: If something is a matter of life and death, it's extremely important and it could involve someone's survival.
🔹For example:
💥Education about HIV and AIDS is a matter of life and death. If people aren't told to protect themselves with condoms, they could die from the disease.
💥Getting someone to hospital quickly after an accident or a heart attack is a matter of life and death. Just a few minutes can make all the difference.
@IdiomsLand
#M
🔘accidentally on purpose
✅If you do something intentionally, but pretend it was an accident, you do it accidentally on purpose.
✳️"I accidentally-on-purpose erased his email address so I couldn't contact him again."
⭕️to the best of one's ability
☑️When someone does something to the best of their ability, they do it as well as they possibly can.
💥"I felt nervous all through the interview, but I replied to the best of my ability."
🔘upset the applecart
☑️Meaning: If you upset the applecart, you do something that causes trouble or upsets someone's plans.
For example:
💥The Stones upset the applecart by pulling out of the music festival. They were going to be the main act.
💥Kelly's sister really upset the applecart when she told Kelly that she'd seen her husband waiting for someone in a hotel lobby when he was supposed to be in New York.
@IDIOMSLAND
#U
🔘under the table
🇺🇸American English
☑️Meaning: If something is done under the table, it's done secretly, usually because it's illegal or unethical.
For example:
💥If I do any overtime, can you pay me under the table so I won't have pay tax on it.
💥If you make under-the-table payments to customs officials, you can get goods through the port without having them inspected.
🔴Note: If this idiom is used to qualify a noun or a noun phrase, hyphens must be used, as in "under-the-table payments".
🎯Origin: Probably related to the fact that if a package or an envelope is passed under a table, other people cannot easily see what's going on.
⭕️Variety: This idiom is typically used in American English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
@IDIOMSLAND
#U
✳️not have a hope in hell (of doing something)
✅To not have any chance at all of doing or achieving something.
🔹With that giant supermarket opening up across the street, our little grocery store won't have a hope in hell of staying open.
🔹You think you can beat me? Ha! You don't have a hope in hell.
@idiomsland
✳️'The Bee's Knees'
☑️When you refer to something as 'the bee's knees', it means that it is of excellent or very high quality.
📝The origin of this expression is largely unknown, although there are a number of theories. Some people believe that it is a reference to the fact that bees carry pollen in sacks on their knees, and that the expression therefore alludes to this concentrated goodness. Others maintain that the saying is just a corruption of the word 'business'.
✔️Another suggestion is that the 'bee' in question was actually Bee Jackson, a world champion Charleston dancer who was very popular in New York in the 1920's!
🔹"Try this chocolate. It's the bee's knees, it really is."
🔹 "Do you like my new shoes? I think they are the bee's knees."
@idiomsland
💥A hot potato
✅Speak of an issue which many people are talking about and which is usually disputed
💥A penny for your thoughts
✅A way of asking what someone is thinking
💥Actions speak louder than words
✅People's intentions can be judged better by what they do than what they say.
💥Add insult to injury
✅To further a loss with mockery or indignity; to worsen an unfavorable situation.
💥An arm and a leg
✅Very expensive or costly. A large amount of money.
💥At the drop of a hat
✅Meaning: without any hesitation; instantly.
@Idiomsland
#A
✳️calculated risk
☑️A calculated risk is a risk taken with full knowledge of the dangers involved.
💥"The company took a calculated risk when they hired Sean straight out of college."
@IDIOMSLAND
#C
⭕️in cahoots with someone
☑️If one person is in cahoots with another, they are working in close partnership, usually conspiring to do something dishonest.
💥"There was a rumour that the Mayor was in cahoots with a chain of supermarkets"
@IDIOMSLAND
#C
A big cheese- an important or a powerful person in a group or family
A bird's eye view- a view from a very high place which allows you to see a large area
A bone of contention- something that people argue for a long time
A cock and a bull story- a story or an explanation which is obviously not true.
At the crack of the dawn- very early in morning
A cuckoo in the nest- someone in a group of people but not liked by them.
A litmus test- a method which clearly proves something
@IdiomsLand
#A
Idioms Group:
send your good idioms here👇
https://t.me/joinchat/AAAAAD6Z911r_4pOriDvng
🔘made of money
☑️Meaning: If you are made of money, you have lots of money.
🔹For example:
✳️When I was in poor countries, everyone thought I was made of money because I could afford to take time off work and travel so far to their country.
✳️That guy Howard acts as if he's made of money, but I know for a fact that he's actually quite poor.
@IdiomsLand
#M
🔘a means to an end
☑️Meaning: You can say something is a means to an end if it's the way to reach a goal, or the way to achieve something.
🔹For example:
⭕️Rupert plays golf, but he doesn't really enjoy it. It's just a means to an end for him because so much business is done on the golf course these days.
⭕️The medical school interviews all candidates and tries to weed out people for whom becoming a doctor is just a means to an end. They don't want people whose real goal is making money.
@IdiomsLand
#M
🔘hold all the aces
✔️A person who holds all the aces is in a very strong position because they have more advantages than anyone else.
🔹"Given the high unemployment figures in some countries, employers hold all the aces."
⭕️above and beyond the call of duty
☑️If a person does something which is above and beyond the call of duty, they show a greater degree of courage or effort than is usually required or expected in their job.
💥"The fire-fighter received a medal for his action which went above and beyond the call of duty."
⭕️jog your memory
☑️Meaning: If something jogs your memory, it helps you to remember something.
For example:
✳️The song really jogged my memory and I could clearly picture the scene thirty years ago when my friends and I first heard it.
✳️The police had a sketch of the suspect drawn and showed it to people in the area in the hope of jogging their memories.
@IDIOMSLAND
#J
🔘up for grabs
❎INFORMAL
☑️Meaning: If something is up for grabs, it's available for anyone who wants to try to get it.
For example:
💥Do you remember when all the best website URLs were still up for grabs? Anyone could get one just by being the first person to claim it.
💥There are some great prizes up for grabs in their latest competition.
🎯Origin: Possibly related to the idea of someone throwing a lot of banknotes into the air, and many people reaching up trying to grab them. As such, the banknotes are "up for grabs".
@IDIOMSLAND
#U
🔘under lock and key
☑️Meaning: If something is under lock and key, it is kept in a very secure place.
For example:
🔴Make sure these documents are under lock and key until we need them.
🔴Poor Josie. Her parents were very strict and they kept her under lock and key throughout her childhood, so she never learned about life's dangers.
@IDIOMSLAND
#U