1 / 11

30 Advanced-Level Idioms With Examples And Meaning

Read here advanced-level idioms with examples and meaning that you can use. For example, a flash in the pan, a dime a dozen, and all bark and no bite.

Download Presentation

30 Advanced-Level Idioms With Examples And Meaning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 30+ Advanced-Level Idioms With Examples And Meaning

  2. Idioms are important to make your speech and writing more interesting and naturalistic. They are very useful in English language tests.  • If you have a good knowledge of idioms, scoring high in English language exams will be easy. Getting a high score on the English language exam is very important to secure your place in top universities abroad. • So, to help you secure your place in the top universities and to get a good score in English language exams, I will provide you with the most common advanced-level idioms with examples and meanings. • So let’s start learning some most common and useful idioms along with their meaning and examples.

  3. Most Common Advanced-Level Idioms With Examples • Here, I will list some of the most common and useful advanced-level idioms with examples and meaning that you can use. • Back to the drawing board • Meaning – To start from a new end for any idea or project. • Example – When my last experiment blew up, I had to go back to the drawing board.  • A blessing in disguise • Meaning – A good thing that looks bad in starting. • Example – Losing my previous job was a blessing in disguise in starting, but I got better opportunities later.

  4. A dime a dozen • Meaning – Something that is very common • Example – Due to Covid 19, working from home has become a dime a dozen. • Beat around the bush. • Meaning – Not saying something because you are uncomfortable saying that. • Example – If you have any query, you can directly ask me do not beat around the bush. • Better late than never • Meaning – Better to be late than not to show up at all. • Example – You will face many difficulties when doing a startup, but it is better late than never, so just go for it and fulfill your dreams.

  5. A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush. • Meaning – It is good to hold on to what you have rather than losing it by going after something that you are not sure about. • Example – I once thought of quitting my job and starting a new business to earn more, but my friends warned me, saying, “you have to remember that a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.” • A flash in the pan • Meaning – Something that looks good in starting but fails to meet expectations. • Example – The new restaurant in our town’s heart was a flash in the pan and closed down after only a few months. • Keep reading for more idioms with examples and meaning. • A leopard can’t change its spots • Meaning – Someone who has a bad habit that is unlikely to change. • Example – It will be hard for Rohan to stop lying, as everyone knows that a leopard can’t change its spots.

  6. All bark and no bite • Meaning – Someone who tries to show he is tough but does not take any action toward his or her threats. • Example – Our boss told us that he will fire all employees if they do not complete the work before the deadline, which was impossible, but later we learned that it was all bark and no bite. • All ears • Meaning – Listening carefully with full interest. • Example – Tell me more about your foreign trip, I’m all ears. • All in a day’s work • Meaning – Doing something that is a routine. • Example – It is hard for some people to work 60 hours a week, but for a doctor, it is all in a day’s work. • All thumbs • Meaning – Being awkward. • Example – I tried to host a party but am all thumbs when speaking on the stage. • Apple of someone’s eye • Meaning – something or someone that is very precious. • Example – Ram is the apple of his parent’s eye.

  7. As the crow flies • Meaning – The most common or directed path between two points. • Example – The town is only a few miles away as the crow flies, but it takes more than an hour to drive there because of the potholes on the road. • Keep reading for more idioms with examples and meaning. • Back to square one • Meaning – Starting from the beginning. • Example – We thought we could finish the project in just 3 days, but we made a mistake at the end, and now we are back to square one. • Ball is in your court. • Meaning – It is your turn to make a decision or take action. • Example – I’ve given you all the information you need, and now the ball is in your court.

  8. Barking up the wrong tree. • Meaning – Accusing the wrong person. • Example – I told the police that they were barking up the wrong tree when they suspected my neighbor of stealing my car. • Between a rock and a hard place • Meaning – A difficult situation with no good option. • Example – I am between a rock and a hard place as I can’t afford to lose my job, and it is becoming difficult to handle the stress anymore. • Bite the bullet. • Meaning – Face difficulty with courage. • Example – The Indian soldiers in the Kargil war bite the bullet by fighting despite their injuries.

  9. Break a leg. • Meaning – Good luck. • Example – I told my friend to break a leg before his dance performance at the annual function. • Burning the midnight oil. • Meaning – Working late into the night. • Example – I had to burn the midnight oil to get good grades in my mid-term exams. • Caught between two stools. • Meaning – Confused between two options. • Example – After completing my sr. sec. I got caught between two stools that whether I should study law or journalism. • Cost an arm and a leg. • Meaning – Something that is too expensive. • Example – Buying a designer handbag for my friend on her birthday cost me an arm and a leg.

  10. Cross that bridge when you come to it. • Meaning – Dealing with the situation when that arrives. • Example – I don’t get tense about thinking about the problems I may or may not get in the future; I prefer to cross the bridge when I come to it. • Cry over spilled milk. • Meaning –  Worrying about something that can not be changed or fixed. • Example – I prefer to work for the future instead of crying over spilled milk. • Curiosity killed the cat. • Meaning – Besainiingtoo curious about something can lead to trouble. • Example – It is better to avoid asking unnecessary questions in class, as you know that curiosity killed the cat.

  11. Thank You If you want to read more interesting content like this you can visit to our website @https://coursementor.com/blog/

More Related