Idioms N Phrases
Idioms N Phrases
Idioms N Phrases
ice (have no influence), bring the house down (to make every
one laugh or cheer)
3. Form irregular, meaning unclear, as in be at large, (as a whole, in
general) ( go great guns, ( to be doing something. Quickly &
successfully), be at daggers drawn ( be angry with each other).
We find, in fact, that most idioms belong to the second group, where
the form is regular but the meaning unclear. However, even in this
group some idioms are clearer than others. For example, the meaning
of to give someone the green light can be guessed as to give someone
permission to start others are too difficult to guess because they have
no association with the original meaning of the individual words. Such
examples are: to tell someone where to get off, to carry the can, to
drop a brick, to call the shots.
Several fixed idioms cannot be changed in any part (except the tense
of the verb). For example: to paint the town red, to fight shy of
something, to get down to business. Others allow a different number of
variants. For example, to know ones onions/ stuff, a hard/ tough not to
crack, to come to a bad/ untimely/ nasty end.
Changing attitudes to language:
Educated usage has become much more flexible and tolerant about
what is considered to be correct or acceptable. Such changes of
attitudes can be observed in several parts of grammar, including case,
number and tense.
The attitude of users towards style has also become more flexible.
Several words which were considered to be slang in the past have
gradually been up-graded in status and are now often considered
informal or colloquial. Much of what was labeled informal in the past is
now considered neutral in style. This is partly due to the spread in the
use of taboo words by educated speakers. Several such words give
much less offence than in the past and are widely used in both
American and British television productions.
One of the main difficulties for learners is knowing in which situation it
is correct to use an idiom, i.e, the level of style. It is better to avoid
using, slang and taboo expressions until then mastery of the language
is complete. It is difficult to know whether an idiom is natural or
appropriate in a certain situation. Another difficulty is that of fixed
idioms and idioms with variants. It is most important to be exact in
ones use of fixed idioms, as an in accurate idiom may mean nothing to
a native speaker. Above all, remember that it is extremely unwise to
translate idioms into or from ones native language. One may be lucky
that the two languages have the same form and vocabulary, but in
most cases the result will be utterly be wildering to the English native
speaker and possibly highly amusing.
statue that it is a dead letter, but cannot say of another statute that is
a living letter; or why we speak of a bird flying as a bird on the wing,
and yet must speak of a man walking as on foot and not on the foot; or
why we say take in hand, and not take in hands or take into hands or
why we must say live from hand to mouth and not live from the hand
to the mouth. But long usage has fixed the idiomatic expression in
each case, and from the idiom we may not swerve.
Let us look at some idioms & phrases.
1. Act with dispatch to act with dispatch means to act swiftly. The
order was carried out with greet dispatch.
2. Attend, attend to you attend a meeting. You attend a wedding.
You attend a conference. When you attend any of these, you are
present there. Attend to means, to look after, deal with, pay
attention to please dont worry about your sons admission. I
will attend to it.
3. Bank on or to bank upon means to relay on, to depend on. I am
banking on you to help me in this.
4. Blow ones own trumpet: He blows his own trumpet. This means
that he is boastful. He talks about himself and his achievements
all the time.
5. It is board and lodging and not boarding and lodging. I pay
Rs.500 for board and lodging
6. Call on, Call in
Call on means to make a short visit to. He called on me Yesterday.
Call in has several meanings. One is to order or request the
return of something. The librarian called in all books for stocktaking. When you all in someone, you ask them to come and see
you or to take action of some kind. Often because you need help:
the police were called in to deal with the strikers. Call in is also
used to mean to make a telephone call to your office to report
where you are and what you are doing she called in the this
afternoon to say that she was ill.
7. Carry on Carry out
Carry on has several meanings. One of the meanings is to
continue ones work or duty please do not get up, carry on with
your work. Despite all the difficulties, he is carrying on
Carry out means to perform, to put into practice, to give effect to.
Whether I like it or not, I have to carry out his instructions.
8. Cope with: I cant cope with my work but it is incorrect to say I
cant cope up with my work.
9. Deal in and deal with
You deal in goods. He deals in electrical goods. Deal in means to
trade in
19.
To make a clean breast of you tell the truth about
something bad you have done, you dont hide anything.
20.
To make ends meet the idiom is to make ends meet or to
make both ends meet and not to make both my ends meet. The
ends are income or expenditure.
21.
To nip in the bud: is an idiom. To nip means to squeeze
sharply. When a bud is nipped, it will not develop into a flower
when something is nipped in the bud; it is destroyed in its early
stages. Bad habits must be nipped in the bud.
22.
On the sly: means in secret. It is used when something is
done unlawfully or dishonestly. He says he has given up drinking.
But I know he drinks on the sly.
23.
To stick to ones guns- when you hold on to you opinion or
belief despite what others say or do, people would say that you
stick to your guns.
24.
Up and about when a person falls ill, he is down in bed.
He is not able to move about in the usual way. When he is all
right, he gets up and moves about. This is what is meant by: He
is up and about.
25.
Wet behind the cars: means immature, inexperienced nave
and innocent. You cant expect him to do this; he is wet behind
the ears.
26.
Cannot make head or tail of cannot understand. I cannot
make head or trail of your letter.
27.
Heads I win, tails you lose this means deception practiced
by the shrewd.
You are bound to do as I say heads I win tails you lose. I stand
to gain both ways.
28.
Over head and ears: completely. I am over head and ears in
debt
29.
To keep ones head- to keep calm keep your head, do not
get annoyed.
30.
To lose ones head to become angry he lost his head with
his brother.
31.
Fair and square honest let your actions be fair and square.
32.
To turn a deaf ear to to refuse to listen to she turned a
deaf ear to my advice.
33.
Walls have ears there may be listeners. Be cautious even
the walls have ears.
34.
To chew the cud to reflect- Thinkers always chew the cud.
35.
From hand to mouth in poverty- She lives from hand to
mouth, in abject poverty.
36.
Hard nut to crack difficult problem to solve solving the
population problem is a hard nut to crack.
37.
To turn over a new leaf to mend ones ways Vishnu has
turned over a new leaf in his life.
38.
In lieu of instead of
Give me a pencil in lieu of the pen I am giving you.
39.
To wash ones dirty linen in public- not to keep ones
personal problems private. Politicians wash their dirty line in
public.
40.
To leave in the lurch to desert.
Do not leave your friends in the lurch
41.
To hit the mail on the head to give true explanation, to
savor do just the right thing
42.
43.
44.
To have a head on ones shoulders to be a sensible
person.
45.
46.
47.
To have a bee in ones bonnet: - to think and talk about
something all the time and think it is very important.
48.
49.
50.
51.
Go great guns: to be doing something quickly and
successfully
52.
Be at dagger drawn: Be angry with each other.
An idiom is a form of expression (or of grammatical usage) peculiar to
particular language and often having a meaning other than the one
that it appears to have.
Idioms are special words or Phrases that have meaning of their own.
Key words with idiomatic uses
Bad:
1. Bad language: Swear words or taboo words. No bad language in
the classroom! If you must swear, save it until youre outside!.
2. A Bad lot: a person with bad personal qualities, someone who is
dishonest. I am so glad that Jerry has stopped going about with
Mike. I heard that he had been in prison for steeling. In my
opinion, he is a bad lot.
3. Be in Someones bad books: be out of favour with someone. If
you dont get the essay finished by tomorrow, youll be in your
teachers bad books again.
Big:
1. Bid Deal!: terrific! Great! (ironical). Said when one is not
impressed/ pleased etc. by something. I got the job! I got the
job ! Bog deal! You were the only applicant, werent you
2. A big hit: Something/ someone very popular with others. By the
way, your new flat is a big hit with your parents. They think its
perfect for you.
3. Give someone a big hand: applaud someone with enthusiasm. He
acted very well in a drama. He was given a big hand.
Dead:
1. Come to a dead halt: come to a complete stop. The lorry come to
a dead halt just in front of the fallen man.
2. Dead drunk: extremely drunk. Ive never seen him in such a
state. He was dead drunk.
3. Dead Wood: someone/ something that is no longer needed or
useful or is out of date. Its time we brought these files up to
date. Well start by throwing out all the dead wood.
Work out this Exercise
Rewrite the following sentences without using idiom. Do not change
the sense.
I had not planned to take a holiday just then but the offer was so good
that I decided to make hay while the sun shone (take advantage of the
opportunity)
After a game lasting nearly three hours, Jones lowered his sail
(Admitted defeat)
A man on the make ( looking after his won advantage) is not to be
trusted.
You cannot have respect for a leader who passes the buck (evades
responsibility by passing it to someone else)
They were not enthusiastic about the scheme, but his forceful
personality and eloquence roped them in eventually (persuaded them
to take part in the scheme)
Find the meanings of the following idiomatic pairs.
1. Alive and kicking well & active
2. Born and bread born & brought up having spent ones early
years.
3. Bright and Breezy in a cheerful, bright mood, doing things
quickly.
4. Cut and dried Settled, decided, final.
5. Fair and square in a fair way, honestly, exactly, directly
6. Free and easy casual, relaxed, unconcerned about social
convention.
7. Hale and hearty physically strong & fit.
8. Home and dry sure and success
9. Meek and mild Quiet , not self assertive or bold.
10.
Rough and ready only approximate, not exact.
11.
Safe and sound unharmed
12.
Short and sweet brisk, without unnecessary detail
13.
Sick and tired thoroughly bored or annoyed with
someone.
14.
Slow but sure slow but good.
15.
Spick and span clean & tidy, in very good order.
ESSAY WRITING
Important points to remember for writing a good essay.
Choose the title of your essay very carefully. Never choose a title
about which you have no clear ideas.
Before you start writing Essay, you must jot down your points or
ideas.
Always remember that the beginning and the ending of an essay
are very important, so give them special attention.
You should not give one sided conclusion. Conclusion should
always be a balanced one.
The points should be developed in a systematic order.
Generally you should not go against the title of the essay.
Do not fill your essay wholly with quotation or facts and figures. It
will only show lack of expression
Put each main idea in a separate paragraph.
You should not give number to the paragraph
The introduction should be direct and to the point. The conclusion
should be quite convincing and natural.
Avoid the use of difficult words. You should not use a word the
meaning of which is not clear to you.
There is no hard and fast rule regarding the length. But if the
limit of words is given, you should adhere to it.
Avoid the use of slang in your Essay.
Write in a beautiful and legible handwriting.
You must revise your essay after completion to correct the
grammatical mistakes, if any.
Essay, the word comes from the French essay first applied in 1580 by
Montaigne to his short writings.
The literary genre allows a great variety of styles: from Bacons Pithy
erudition, to Lambs Chatty and personal ramblings, to the impersonal,
formal analysis of Lockes Essay Concerning the Human
understanding. Today the essay is no longer a loose sally of the mind,
an irregular, indigestible piece, as averred by Dr. Johnson.
An Essay is a piece of prose composition generally short, on any
chosen subject. The word essay literally means an attempt. The
essay is, properly speaking, an a attempt at expressing your thoughts,
personal experience, opinions or ides on a given topic.
Essay writing is an art. The students should master this art from the
very beginning of their educational career. The important of the essay
writing can hardly be exaggerated. Infact essay is one of the most
effective and surest test of the personality and mental development of
should logically lead to another. Thus there should be organic unity and
continuity of thought in the essay. You should also see that no aspect
of the subject is unduly stressed or elaborated at the expense of
another. There should thus be a certain balance and proportion in the
development of ideas.
As I said earlier the introduction should e brief and striking. It should at
once catch the interest of the reader. Perhaps the most common
opening in essays is with a definition of the subject. But there are more
striking ways of beginning an essay: with an anecdote or reminiscence
with a quotation, with a question, with a proverb or a striking
statement, with a piece of vivid description as so on.
And how to conclude the essay. You can briefly seem up the main
arguments or ideas that you have developed in the course of the essay
in the last paragraph. You can draw your conclusion on the basis of the
arguments. Let it be only one paragraph. You can conclude the essay
with a prediction a quotation, witticism or Anecdote, a question or with
an abrupt remark.
A good hand writing like a pleasing personality is always an asset.
Therefore, the students should try to improve their handwriting before
hand. The essay should be written in a legible handwriting. A good
handwriting always fetches more marks in the examinations. The
students should also revise their essay after writing. In this way they
can correct any mistakes which they may have committed regarding
spelling, punctuation, construction of sentences etc.
Regarding the length of an Essay, there is no hard and fast rule. Some
writes like Bacon used to write very short Essay. On the other hand
William Hazlitt another famous Essayist, wrote very lengthy essays.
The examiner is not much impressed by the length by the your essay.
He is more influenced by the substance of your essay and the manner
in which you have presented or expressed it. The real thing which
matter is that the Essay should be systematic and convincing of
course, when you are asked to write an essay within a fixed limit of
words, you must adhere to it. Essay writing should be a personal
attempt made in a pleasant manner to make it a delightful reading.
However, whatever you known on a subject is expected to be
dexterously organized and presented. The pit the thesis of the essay
should be clear to the reader. An essay is not a Shapeless mass of
ideas and feeling, facts and figures, incidents and events, but a welldesigned piece of pen-manship. To meet these expectations, you will
need to develop the skills associated with the different stages of essay
writing.
Think about what you need or want to write before you start . this
advice may seem obvious, but it is all too easy to rush into a piece of
writing without having a clear idea of what you are going to say. There
are several considerations to bear in mind your subject; your purpose
your readers; the form of writing that you are using (essay, story,
report so on)
Obviously, these circumstances vary from one writing situation to
another. To be effective, the contents must be relevant and appropriate
to the particular situation.
A vital feature of success in structuring ideas effectively concerns the
generation of ides. The subjects that comforts you has to be thought
about and ideas created in your main before they can be translated
into words on paper. Harnessing the power of your brain and applying
its energy to the topic in question is something called brain-storming.
Here are some approaches to help you.
Take a single sheet of paper. Make a box in each of the four corners
and let them act as sign ports bearing the headings:
Subject purpose, form; Readers.
Under each of the headings write notes along the following lines to
indicate the direction that you wish to take.
1. Subject: identify the main topic and, perhaps, major points of
your intended piece of work
2. purpose: to explain , explore or entertain? Indicate which
category.
3. Form: letter, Essay, report, story etc?
4. Readers: extent and age of intended audience whether the
readers known to you or anonymous.
Write the main theme of your essay in the middle of a fresh sheet of
paper. Then jot down any and every idea that occurs to you in the next
few minutes. Do not worry where they are placed in the paper. Some
ideas will follow in sequences. Some will be random and some will start
a new train of thought. Where ideas seem irrelevant, do not worry for
they may be of use later on.
Where there is an obvious link between a run of ides, fn them out
across the page on a series of lines drawn to resemble the branching
the several twigs. It is important to keep going and not to allow ideas
to dry up. If you stop will create a blockage in the flow of ideas feeding
out from your brain. Use various devices to keep ideas flowing. For
example:
1. Reverse thinking 0 new for old; fast for slow; negative for
positive;
2. Imagine that your are in a time machine retreating and
advancing,
3. Picture yourself as a part of the scene;
4. take imaginary slow- motion shots as though a camera;
5. Look at the problem from other points of view;
Coherence:
The frame work just described helps you to present your materials
coherently. You should have sorted out the contents so that the items
cohere or Stick together. Do not allow your reader to be misled by
allowing material to appear out-of-place.
Sequences and conditions:
It is the logical sequence that matters. Connections should be made
within a considered structure. In this way there are no loose ends.
Careful planning means that the attention of readers should be
directed without fuss. Sometimes it may be useful to give a signal that
a turning pint in the argument or a vital new addition to a description
is about to be made. Linking expression such as however, even so,
on the other hand, yet, or in addition, can indicate the beginning of
a new stage in the development of your materials while, at the same
time, emphasizing its continuity.
One topic at a time.
Your first aim should be to generate sufficient ideas to make the
content of your writing worth while. Your second should be to present it
in an orderly way. The three part structure already mentioned earlierintroduction- body- conclusion will help you to do that.
In any of these three parts- and especially when you are dealing with
the main structure (the body) of your subject matter you may need to
include more than one topic. Each separate topic should be dealt with
in a separate paragraph.
A paragraph is a distinct section of a passage of writing. It is
concerned with one topic and only one. Help your readers to
understand quickly and clearly what each paragraph is about. So
not confuse them by including any material that is not strictly
relevant to the topic with which the paragraph is concerned.
The topic sentences and paragraph unity
Build each paragraph on a topic sentences so called because it
announces the topic being dealt with in that paragraph.
The topic sentences tells your readers what the paragraph is
about. All the other sentences in that paragraph should be seen
to have a direct bearing on the subject matter indicated by the
topic sentences. That is what is meant by paragraph unity .
Think of the topic sentence as a signpost. It tells your readers
where the paragraph is going. Then having indicated the route
you are taking. Stick to it. Do not wander off into by ways. Each
paragraph corresponds to one particular stage of the journey.
When you have completed it, start on the next stage, in a new
paragraph.
The position of the topic sentences.