Subcribe to our RSS feeds Join Us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Add to Circles

Monday 10 November 2014

Idioms and phrases

Idioms & Phrases

Above board - Honest and open
At arms length - To keep at a distance
At the eleventh hour - At the last moment
At sixes and sevens - In a disordered manner
An apple of discord - A cause of quarrel
At home - Comfortable
Alpha and omega - The beginning and the end
At sea - Confused and lost
At one’s beck and call - At one’s service
An acid test - A critical test
Add fuel to the fire - To aggravate the situation
At a snail’s pace - Very slowly
To beat about the bush - Talk irrelevantly
A bone of contention - A source of quarrel
To burn one’s boats - Go back on a decision
To burn candle at both ends - To waste lavishly
To build castles in the air - Make imaginary schemes
A bolt from the blue - Something unexpected
By leaps and bounds - Rapidly
A burning question - An important topic

To bell the cat - To face the risk
A big gun - An important person
To blow one’s own - To praise one’s own
trumpet achievement
A bosom friend - A very close friend
A brown study - Dreaming
A close shave - Narrow escape
To cut a sorry figure - To make a poor show
Take one to task - Rebuke
Turn a deaf ear - Disregard / ignore what one says
By hook or by crook - By fair or foul means
Gain ground - Become popular
Pay off old scores - Take revenge
Put a spoke in one’s wheel - To upset one’s plans
Turn over a new leaf - Change for the better
Make up one’s mind - Decide
In the long run - Eventually; ultimately
In the nick of time - Just at the last moment
Through thick and thin - Under all conditions
With a high hand - Oppressively
Sitting on the fence - Hesitate between two decisions
Bring to light - Disclose
Burn one’s fingers - Get into trouble by interfering in other’s affairs
Laugh one’s head off - Laugh heartily
Chew the cud - Ponder over something
Hard and fast rules - Strict rules
Play second fiddle - Take an unimportant part
Download more notes from www.BankExamsToday.com
Rank and file - Ordinary persons
By fits and starts - In short periods, not regularly
A wee bit - A little
Out of the wood - Free from difficulties and dangers
Under his thumb - Under his control
At one’s wits end - In a state where one does not know what to do
Between the devil and the - Between two dangers
deep sea
Burn the midnight oil - Work or study hard
Call a spade a spade - Speak fr ankly and directly
Come off with flying colours - Be highly successful
Hoping against hope - Without hope
Hit the nail on the head - Do or say the exact thing
An axe to grind - A personal interest in the matter
Spread like wild fire - Spread quickly
The gift of the gab - Talent for speaking
Throw out of gear - Disturb the work
Tooth and nail - With all one’s power
Take to one’s heels - Run away
Die in harness - Die while in service
Out of the way - Strange
Read between the lines - Understand the hidden meaning
In cold blood - Deliberately; without emotion
Show a clean pair of heals - Run away
A thorn in the flesh - A constant source of annoyance
Smell a rat - Suspect something foul
Nip in the bud - Destroy in the early stage
Out of the question - Impossible
Stick to one’s guns - Remain faithful to the cause
A man of straw - A man of no substance
Leave no stone unturned - Use all available means
Harp on the same string - Dwell on the same subject
Take a leaf out of one’s book - Imitate one
Like a fish out of water - In a strange situation
At one’s beck and call - Under his control
Bury the hatchet - End the quarrel and make peace
Feather one’s own nest - Make money unfairly
Leave one in the lurch - Desert one in difficulties; leave one in a helpless condition
To eat humble pie - To apologize humbly; to yield under humiliating circumstances
To eat your words - To take back what you have said
To make both ends meet - To live within one’s income
In high spirits - Very happy
Kill two birds with one stone - To achieve two results with one effort
Let the cat out of the bag - Reveal a secret
Put the cart before the horse - Put or do things in the wrong order
A hard nut to crack - A difficult problem
In hot water - In trouble
Wash one’s dirty linen - Discuss unpleasant
in public private matters before strangers
On tenterhooks - In a state of suspense and anxiety
To all names - To abuse
To get rid of - Dispose of
At daggers drawn - Bitterly hostile
To play ducks and drakes - To act foolishly or inconsistently
To take the bull by the horns - To tackle a problem in a bold and direct fashion
Rain cats and dogs - Rain heavily
To move heaven and earth - To make a supreme effort
No avail - Without any result
Bark up the wrong tree - Accuse or denounce the wrong person
Keep one at bay - Keep one at a distance
Make a clean breast of it - Confess – especially when a person has done a wrong thing
Have a card up one’s sleeve - Have a secret plan in reserve
Like a cat on hot bricks - Very nervous
Cat and dog life - Life full of quarrels
Cock and bull story - Made up story that one should not believe
Cry for the moon - Ask for the impossible
The pros and cons - The various aspects of a matter in detail
Be in a tight corner - In a very difficult situation
Cross one’s t’s and dot - Be precise, careful and
one’s i’s exact
Keep one’s fingers crossed - The anxiety in which you hope that nothing will upset your plans

No comments:

Post a Comment

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...