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My English Language
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English IdiomsHere is a list of common idioms in the English language. See
also our sections on phrasal
verbs for idiomatic usage and Cockney
Rhyming Slang
for more expressions, some lesser known, that have seeped into the language from
their East London beginnings. Idioms and idiomatic expressionsA piece of cake - very easy To add fuel to the fire - to intensify a bad situation A steal - very good value, at low cost To have an ace/trick up your sleeve - a secret that will give you an advantage A bit much - too excessive To wash your hands of something - to disassociate yourself from something or someone To have cold feet - to lose the courage to do something All over the shop - very disorganised At sixes and sevens - very disorganised To be in the dog house - when someone is annoyed with you because you have done something wrong Bread and butter - everyday, usual event / means of earning money All skin and bone - very thin, unhealthily skinny White lie - a small lie told usually to protect someone's feelings All square / square - everyone is equal, no one has an advantage over anyone else All the rage - very popular Ill at ease - to be uncomfortable about something An old flame - an old romantic attachment usually of whom you are still fond Apple of your eye - someone who is very special to you Around the clock - 24 hours a day Catch 22 - a situation which has no resolution, all possible outcomes are bad
To be at loose end - to have spare time but nothing to do To be at your wit's end - exasperated because you don't know what to do about a situation Clean sheet - to not concede any goals (in football) Clean slate - not taking past issues into account In a pickle - in trouble At the drop of a hat - spontaneously, immediately Vicious circle - a situation where one bad event causes another bad event sequentially Crocodile tears - to pretend to be upset by something By the skin of your teeth - only just managed to do something, very nearly failed To have an axe to grind - To have a grievance To have a bone to pick (with someone) - To have a grievance with someone A bad apple - a person who is bad who is affecting others Black sheep - a person who is the odd one out due to bad behaviour, the outcast To come clean - to admit to something To bad-mouth someone - to say bad things about someone behind their back (to do something) Behind someone's back - to do or say something (usually negative) without the other person knowing (someone doesn't) Bat an eyelid - to not notice / show any emotion about a situation In the clear - not suspected To walk on eggshells - to be careful what you say to someone because they get offended very easily To have the upper hand - to have the advantge Top dog - the most important/influential person Waiting with bated breath - waiting for something expectantly in an excited, impatient state The bees knees - the best Dark horse - a mysterious person usually with something to hide To have a cross to bear - to have a burden or heavy responsibility Pig headed - to be obstinate Behind bars - in prison Salad days - a happy time in your life Two faced - a person who is untrustworthy, saying one thing to your face and another behind your back To take into account - to make allowances for, to consider something from the past in the current situation Itchy feet - to want to move, to travel To keep something under your hat - to keep it a secret To play devil's advocate - to argue a point you may not believe in just to sustain an argument Better safe than sorry - better prepare with caution now rather than take a risk Cliffhanger - an exciting event where you don't know what will happen next (for example, at the end of a television programme) Fly in the ointment - the one negative thing that spoils the whole To get your just deserts - to get what you deserve Big picture - the wider context, the overall situation To do a runner - to run away from something To be tickled pink - very pleased about something Green fingered - good at gardening To be hard up - to have little money Pain in the neck - a nuisance Spot on - exactly right, perfect To be skint/brassic - to have no money Sling your hook - (telling someone to) go away To swing the lead - to get out of going somewhere (usually to work) by pretending to be ill Dutch courage - confidence felt from drinking alcohol Red herring - a false piece of evidence to distract from the real situation On the cards - a definite possibility and probably going to happen To lose face - to lose reputation, to look bad to others To have egg on your face - you are made to look stupid (to be) Over the moon - delighted Bite the bullet - to face up to what cannot be avoided Mad as a hatter - a crazy person Off hand - without preparation To skate on thin ice - take a big risk (to be) Off hand (with someone) - to be impolite to someone or curt with someone To do a double take - to take a second look at something To rock the boat - to cause trouble To smell a rat - to suspect that something is wrong/a lie To fine tune something - to make small alterations to get something right/better To lose your temper - to get angry To fly off the handle - to get angry To see red - to get angry Gone to pot - gone wrong Poker face - showing no emotion (to take something with) A pinch of salt - not to fully believe what someone says Night owl - someone who like to go to bed late Early bird - someone who likes to get up early in a morning Spineless - no courage (to be) Quids in - something will make you lot of money Old hat - old fashioned To make the most of a situation - to enjoy to the fullest extent Phrasal VerbsThere are lots of common idioms and collocations in English, often constructed using phrasal verbs, which is when a verb is used alongside a preposition to create an expression entirely new. For our list of common English phrasal verbs use the button in the menu below. Cockney Rhyming SlangThe East End of London developed its own secret slang language in the mid 1800s. This Cockney code grew popular and spread to other parts of the country and is still used today in various forms. For a discussion of Cockney Rhyming Slang and examples of the expressions in context, please click on the button in the menu below.
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