📔 Pay an arm and a leg for something
📋Meaning
To pay a lot of money for something. You can also say that something “costs an arm and a leg.”
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “The price of chocolate has doubled. I nearly paid an arm and a leg for a small candy bar.”
“Chocolate costs an arm and a leg now.”
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📔 To have sticky fingers
📋Meaning
To be a thief.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “The manager fired the cashier because he had sticky fingers. He stole more than $200 in a month.”
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📔 To pony up
📋Meaning
To pay for something or settle a debt.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “Pony up and give me the $5 you owe me.”
“I told my roommate Jane to pony up her portion of the rent money.”
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📔 Break the bank
📋Meaning
To be very expensive.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “Taking a week-long vacation would break the bank. There’s no way I could afford to do it.”
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📔 To be closefisted
📋Meaning
Someone who doesn’t want to spend money. Similar to being stingy.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “Carl is so closefisted, he won’t even buy snacks for the Christmas party.”
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📔 Midas touch
📋Meaning
To be able to make money easily. This idiom comes from the story of King Midas , who turned everything he touched into gold.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “Jane really has the Midas touch. Every business she starts becomes very successful.”
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📔receive (one's) just deserts
📋To receive that which one deserves, especially a punishment or unfavorable outcome. (Note: The phrase is often misspelled as "just desserts," due to the pronunciation of "deserts" and "desserts" being the same in this context.)
🗣The CEO cheated his clients out of nearly $4 million, but he received his just deserts when he was stripped of everything he owned and sent to prison.
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📔 brace of shakes
📋Meaning
Instantly, quickly, or in an extremely short amount of time, as of a task or event. "Brace," taken from the old French for the arms' breadth from hand to hand, means twice; the phrase as a whole refers either to an old nautical term, meaning the time it takes the sail to shake twice as it takes up the wind, or else the short time it takes to shake a dice-box twice. Often used in the phrase "in a brace of shakes."
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣I'll have that ready for you in a brace of shakes.
🗣We'll be there in a brace of shakes.
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📔 catch (on) fire
📋Meaning
To begin to burn, usually after being touched by an existing fire.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣Hey, keep an eye on that pan, I don't want our dinner to catch on fire.
🗣I blew out all the candles so, don't worry, the house won't catch fire!
🗣I was sitting too close to the fireplace and my sleeve caught on fire!
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📔 a peg too low
📋Meaning
Dejected; in low spirits. It originally referred to pegs that were inserted into draughts to measure how much alcohol had been consumed. If the peg was low, there wasn't much alcohol left to drink.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣I'm a peg too low right now, so I appreciate you coming by to cheer me up.
🗣A: "Nick seems to be a peg too low today. Is he OK?" B: "Yeah, he just found out he got rejected from his first-choice school.
🗣"Thank goodness we're going to the beach next week—I've been feeling a peg too low for a while.
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📔 all sharped up
📋Meaning
Very nicely dressed.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣The guys in the wedding party are all sharped up for the ceremony—they look so handsome!
🗣I have to be all sharped up at this event tonight—a lot of important people will be there.
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📔 cross (one's) bows
📋Meaning
To annoy or irritate.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣Boy, you are really crossing my bows today. Why can't you just do what I ask without arguing about it?
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📔 Compare apples and oranges
📋Meaning
Apples are very different from oranges both in looks and taste. It’s hard to compare two things that are so unlike each other. So then, to compare apples and oranges is to compare two very different things.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “I’m not sure which I enjoy more—pottery or dancing. It’s like comparing apples and oranges.”
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📔 Not one’s cup of tea
📋Meaning
If something is not your cup of tea, it’s an activity you have no interest in, don’t enjoy or don’t do well in.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “Camping is really not my cup of tea so I’m going to visit my friend in New York instead.”
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📔 pester (someone) for (something)
📋Meaning
To continually annoy someone with requests for something.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣I wish you would stop pestering me for a new bicycle; your birthday will be here soon enough!
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📔 Peter Pan syndrome
📋Meaning
A psychological state or condition in which a grown person cannot or refuses to act like an adult; a stubborn and persistent immaturity found in an adult person.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣I seem cursed to only find men who have some damned Peter Pan syndrome. I'm tired of going out with guys who act like children!
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📔 give (someone) the stink eye
📋Meaning
To make a facial expression of unreserved disgust, contempt, disapproval, distrust, or general ill will toward someone.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣Some guy across the bar has been giving me the stink eye since we came in. It must be something to do with my outfit.
🗣I must have done something wrong on Friday because the boss gave me the stink eye as soon as I came into work on Monday.
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📔 give (someone) the stink eye
📋Meaning
To make a facial expression of unreserved disgust, contempt, disapproval, distrust, or general ill will toward someone.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣Some guy across the bar has been giving me the stink eye since we came in. It must be something to do with my outfit.
🗣I must have done something wrong on Friday because the boss gave me the stink eye as soon as I came into work on Monday.
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📔not a moment too soon
📋Meaning
At the last possible moment before it is too late; just in the nick of time.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣A: "The surgeon has just arrived." B: "And not a moment too soon! This patient needs an operation immediately!"
🗣The police arrived not a moment too soon, and the would-be burglar was apprehended before anything could be stolen.
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📔 To be loaded
📋Meaning
To have a lot of money.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “Billy paid his Harvard Law School tuition with cash. His family is loaded.”
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📔 Rule of thumb
📋Meaning
if you hear someone say as a rule of thumb, they mean that it’s a general unwritten rule for whatever they’re talking about.
These rules of thumb are not based on science or research, and are instead just general principles. For example, there’s no written scientific rule that you must add oil to boiling water when cooking pasta, but it’s a rule of thumb and is practiced by most people so the pasta won’t stick to the bottom of the pan.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “As a rule of thumb you should always pay for your date’s dinner.”
“Why? There’s no rule stating that!”
“Yes, but it’s what all gentlemen do.”
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📔 Keep your chin up
📋Meaning
“Stay strong, you’ll get through this. Don’t let these things affect you too badly.”
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “Hey, Keiren, have you had any luck finding work yet?”
“No, nothing, it’s really depressing, there’s nothing out there!”
“Don’t worry, you’ll find something soon, keep your chin up buddy and don’t stress.”
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📔 Find your feet
📋Meaning
means that you’re still adjusting and getting used to the new environment.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “Lee, how’s your son doing in America?”
“He’s doing okay. He’s learned where the college is but is still finding his feet with everything else. I guess it’ll take time for him to get used to it all.”
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📔 A piece of cake
📋Meaning
A piece of cake refers to a task or job that’s easy to complete or accomplish.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “I expected the English test to be difficult but it was a piece of cake.”
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📔 In hot water
📋Meaning
When someone is in hot water, they’re in a bad situation or serious trouble.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “My brother is in hot water for failing all his college classes.”
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📔 sleep rough
📋Meaning
To sleep outside at night, usually because one has no home or shelter. Primarily heard in UK, Australia.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣The government's aim is to have the number of people sleeping rough halved in five years' time.
🗣I slept rough for a couple of years after my house was repossessed. It's not something I would wish on anyone.
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📔 help (someone) out of a fix
📋Meaning
To help someone avoid or escape from some troublesome, difficult, or dangerous position or situation.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣My father's always having to go down to the courthouse to help my knuckle-headed brother out of some fix or another.
🗣Thanks so much for staying late with me to finish that report the other day—you really helped me out of a fix!
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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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