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English idioms,sayings and expressions
english idioms,sayings
viernes, 22 de abril de 2011
visit from the stork 30977
visit from the stork
Fig. a birth. (According to legend, babies are brought to their parents by a stork.) I hear that Maria is expecting a visit from the stork. The young couple had a visit from the stork.
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use something before something
affix one's signature to something
hold good
by the hour
be out of action
the dreaded lurgy (British & Australian humorous)
stand on two feet
. Jet off
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There's no time to lose.
touch down
lie doggo
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one of these days
smuggle someone or something past
of your own making
be up and about/around
secret weapon - definition
lead a boring-exciting life
hot destination
sun-kissed
GAIT
Good men are scarce. and A good man is hard to find.
quote, unquote
thank you for sharing.
send (one) about one's business
pet peeve
footy
top·notch (tŏp'nŏch')
chum 1 (chm)
bring up the rear
over the counter
hoarse as a crow
give somebody the evil eye
culturally deprived and culturally disadvantaged
be beyond somebody's ken
champ at the bit and chomp at the bit
Slipping Through My Fingers
blow the joint
into overdrive
building customer loyalty:
meek as a lamb
monopoly money
far-from-reliable
The wolf is at the door.
bridge the gap
mea·sly (mzl)
low on the totem pole
power of love
Foreigner I Want To Know What Love Is
powder keg
every now and then - occasionally; "every so often...
everybody hurts
Turn around, every now and the I get a little bit ...
fall apart (at the seams) and come apart at the seams
make a stand
in the navy
short·list also short-list (shôrtlst)
be on the cards (British, American & Australian) ...
splitting headache
be in eclipse (literary)
run down some lines
Poison pill
be staring somebody in the face
hang by a thread
dead-end job - definition
kick your heels (British)
Turn-up for the books
brown someone off
'Rooted to the spot'
shuttle diplomacy
according to one's own lights
less than pleased
doctor someone up
be over the hump (American informal)
work your socks off (informal)
vote of thanks
be up with the lark (British, American & Australi...
skinflint [ˈskɪnˌflɪnt]
bedridden [ˈbɛdˌrɪdən]
inside joke
Rough edges
stick shift
a heavy date (American & Australian humorous)
fleet of foot
boy oh boy (spoken) also oh boy
a stuffed shirt
butt into something
fast-talk someone into something
in inverted commas (British & Australian)
and hang the cost/expense
bring someone back to reality
round-robin letter
deadpan
.Two in distress makes sorrow less
No good deed goes unpunished
spin in somebody's grave
go (all) round the houses (British)
steal someone's heart
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