Slang of the Day
💥tee off
🇺🇸American English
💢Meaning: to make someone angry, to annoy
❗️For example:
🔺He really teed his girlfriend off when he said he couldn't go out because he had to watch a football game on TV.
🔺Ken teed me off when he said he couldn't pay back the money he owed me.
🗨Variety: This slang term is typically used in American English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Slang of the Day
💥wicked
🇬🇧British English
💢Meaning: very good, excellent, outstanding
❗️For example:
🔺We saw this new band last night and they were wicked. Go and see them next time they play.
🔺Where'd you get the jacket, Dave? It's wicked.
👁🗨Variety: This slang term is typically used in British English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Idiom of the Day
🔰a slap on the wrist
💢Meaning: ➡️If someone gives you a slap on the wrist, they give you a mild punishment for making a mistake or doing something wrong.
❗️For example:
🔺The tribunal didn't think it was a serious offence, so they just gave him a slap on the wrist. All he got was a warning.
🔺Some of our players got a slap on the wrist for getting to the training session late. The coach warned them not to be late again and then made them do twenty push-ups.
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Slang of the Day
📌geezer
Offensive
📝Meaning: an old person
📍For example:
🔺I'm late because I got stuck behind some old geezer at the bank who took ages to sort out his stuff.
🔺One day I'll be one of those old geezers who sit in the park all day playing chess and checkers.
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Slang of the Day
💥quarterback
🇺🇸American English
Ⓜ️eaning: to lead and make decisions
❗️For example:
🔺We need someone who can quarterback the sales team when they go to trade fairs.
🔺Who's going to quarterback Monday's staff meeting?
🛡Origin: From American football, or gridiron, in which the quarterback is the player who leads the team during offensive moves.
👁🗨Variety: This slang term is typically used in American English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Slang of the Day
📌hoops
🇺🇸American English
Ⓜ️eaning: the game of basketball
►For example:
🔺Every day after work I hook up with my friends down at the court and we shoot some hoops.
🔺My little bro' practices hoops every day after school. He wants to be an NBA star.
👁🗨Variety: This slang term is typically used in American English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Slang of the Day
🔰dork
🇺🇸American English Offensive
Ⓜ️eaning: a socially awkward person
〽️For example:
🔺My son is upset because some kids at school called him a dork.
🔺You call my little brother a dork again and I'll beat the crap out of you! You got that?
☑️Note: This word is usually used among young people, and has a similar meaning to "geek", "dweeb", "nerd", etc.
👁🗨Variety: This slang term is typically used in American English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Slang of the Day
💥bottom
Offensive
Ⓜ️eaning: a man who takes the passive role in gay or homosexual sex
❗️For example:
🔺Joey made a page about himself on a gay community website and it said he preferred bottoms aged 20 to 40.
🔺When Pedro was in a gay bar he met a guy he really liked, but it soon became clear that they were both bottoms.
🗨Note: This is a common gay slang term and it means a man who prefers to be "on the bottom", or to take the passive role, in gay sex. A man who prefers to be "on top", or to take the active role, is called a "top".
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Slang of the Day
💥Yikes!
Ⓜ️eaning: interjection expressing surprise or shock
✨For example:
🔺When Sally saw her phone bill, she said, "Yikes! How could it be that much?"
🔺While Bill was driving home, he nearly hit a car that pulled out in front of him. "Yikes! That was close!"
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Slang of the Day
🌀hip
Ⓜ️eaning: trendy, stylish, fashionable among young people
➰For example:
🔺It's hip for young guys to look cute and a bit "fem" these days, so many are taking good care of their skin and spending a lot on clothes and haircuts.
🔺When we were young smoking was hip, but these days it's not so hip to smell of cigarettes and damage your lungs.
🛡Origin: Many etymologists believe that the terms hip, hep and hepcat (e.g., jazz musicians' now cliched "hip cat") derive from the west African Wolof language word hepicat, which means "one who has his eyes open". (from Wikipedia)
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Idiom of the Day
💥on the back burner
☑️Meaning: If a plan or a project is on the back burner, it isn't being worked on at present, but it might be completed in the future.
🔺For example:
▪️Plans for the new factory have been put on the back burner until the economy improves.
▪️It's a great idea, but we're too busy to look into it now so we'll put it on the back burner for a while.
🌀Origin: Probably metaphorical, from cooking and the fact that most stoves have front and back burners. Front burners are used for things that need attention now, while back burners are for things that don't need much attention just now.
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Idiom of the Day
💥kick the habit
Ⓜ️eaning: If you kick the habit, you manage to stop doing something that has become a bad habit.
🌀For example:
🔺I wish I could stop smoking cigarettes but I just can't kick the habit.
🔺Rashid used to bite his fingernails but his girlfriend made him kick the habit.
✔️Note: "Kick a habit" can be used when talking about habits in general, as in "Kicking a habit isn't easy."
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Idiom of the Day
👍🏻yes-man
Ⓜ️eaning: If someone's a yes-man, they'll say they agree with someone, or say "yes" to them, in order to please them.
🌀For example:
▪️Do you think Larry's just a yes-man, or will he tell the president what he really thinks?
▪️I don't want a yes-man. I want someone who'll tell me the truth.
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Idiom of the Day
💥have a soft spot for
Ⓜ️aning: If you have a soft spot for someone or something, you feel a warm affection for them.
〽️For example:
🔺I don't know why, but I've always had a soft spot for Uncle George.
🔺Margaret can't see a stray cat without taking it home. She has a real soft spot for them.
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Idiom of the Day
💥quick as a flash | quick as a wink | quick as lightning
💢Meaning: If you're as quick as a flash, or quick as a wink, or quick as lightning, you're very quick.
❗️For example:
🔺Jimmy knew the answer and, quick as a flash, he put up his hand.
🔺Rafael is a big guy for a tennis player, but he's as quick as lightning when he's running around the court.
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Slang of the Day
💥wicked
🇬🇧British English
💢Meaning: very good, excellent, outstanding
❗️For example:
🔺We saw this new band last night and they were wicked. Go and see them next time they play.
🔺Where'd you get the jacket, Dave? It's wicked.
👁🗨Variety: This slang term is typically used in British English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Slang of the Day
🔰hooky | hookey
🇺🇸American English
☑️Meaning: (in phrase play hooky) to stay away from school or work without permission
✨For example:
🔹Let's play hooky tomorrow and go watch the golf. Things are pretty quiet at work anyway.
🔹When I was a kid, I was caught playing hookey when school inspectors nabbed us at the mall.
💥Variety: This slang term is typically used in American English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Slang of the Day
💥nab
☑️Meaning: to catch someone doing something wrong
❗️For example:
🔺Drug testers have nabbed another professional cyclist for taking steroids.
🔺Some kids were nabbed while stealing sweets from the store.
Slang of the Day
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Idiom of the Day
🔰yellow-bellied
☑️Meaning: If someone is yellow-bellied, they are not brave, or they are cowardly.
❗️For example:
🔺Tony's father called him yellow-bellied when he was a five-year-old boy because he didn't want to ride a horse. Tony has never forgotten it.
🔺The whole country behaved like yellow-bellied cowards when they let a small group of cheats steal the national election.
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Idiom of the Day
🔰can't see the forest for the trees
🇺🇸American English
Ⓜ️eaning: If you can't see the forest for the trees, you can't see the whole situation clearly because you're looking too closely at small details, or because you're too closely involved.
►For example:
🔺I don't think we can see the forest for the trees at this stage, so let's get an outsider to take a look at the project and give us a progress report.
🔺Mark is so focused on product details that he can't see the forest for the trees when it comes to the overall needs of the company.
💥Note: The British and Australian equivalent is "can't see the wood for the trees".
👁🗨Variety: This idiom is typically used in American English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Idiom of the Day
🔰I owe you one!
❗️INFORMAL
Ⓜ️eaning: You can say "I owe you one!" when someone has done something for you and you'd be happy to return the favour one day.
►For example:
🔺Thanks for helping me out, Bob. I owe you one!
🔺"I owe you one!" said Malik after I'd told him to sell his shares just before the market collapsed.
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Idiom of the Day
◾️hit the nail on the head
Ⓜ️eaning: If you hit the nail on the head, you describe the exact nature of something such as a problem, a solution, or a situation.
〰For example:
🔺Bernie hit the nail on the head when he said the team's problem is that the players don't have confidence in one another.
🔺You really hit the nail on the head when you said that Gina needs to stop worrying about making mistakes when she speaks English.
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Idiom of the Day
💥hot under the collar
Ⓜ️eaning: If you are hot under the collar, you feel angry or annoyed about something.
❕For example:
🔺The coach was getting hot under the collar because he thought the referee was making unfair decisions against his players.
🔺We could see Matt was getting hot under the collar because of what Ken was saying, so we changed the subject.
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Idiom of the Day
💥a one-track mind
Ⓜ️eaning: If someone has a one-track mind, they spend most of their time thinking about one subject.
✨For example:
🔺Brian's had a one-track mind since he started his own company. All he thinks about now is business and making money.
🔺Mark's upset because Jenny said he's got a one-track mind and he's always thinking about sex.
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Word of the Day
📌stupefy /ˈstuːpəˌfaɪ/ verb
stupefies; stupefied; stupefying
Learner's definition of STUPEFY
[+ object]
☑️: to shock or surprise (someone) very much : to cause (someone) to become confused or unable to think clearly — usually used as (be) stupefied
▪️I was stupefied by their decision.
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The baby was stupefied by the kiss.
Slang of the Day
💥sickie
British and Australian English
Ⓜ️eaning: a day taken off work after calling in sick when one is actually well
🌀For example:
🔺Paul throws a sickie at least once a month. I wonder if his boss has noticed that he's always "sick" when the weather is beautiful?
🔺Robbo reckons the surf's awesome today, so I'm chuckin' a sickie and headin' down the coast.
🗨Variety: This slang term is typically used in British and Australian English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Slang of the Day
💥rubbish
🇬🇧British English
Ⓜ️eaning: to make very negative comments, to strongly criticise
🌀For example:
▪️British newspapers nearly always rubbish local sports teams when they don't do well in international competitions.
▪️Why does that guitarist in Oasis always rubbish other bands? I don't think I've ever heard him say anything nice about another band, except for The Beatles.
🔍Variety: This slang term is typically used in British English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
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Slang of the Day
💥jittery
Ⓜ️eaning: very nervous
❕For example:
▪️Sir Elton has been singing his songs on stage for over forty years, but he says he still gets jittery before a concert.
▪️Police at the airport closely observe people entering the country, and if anyone seems jittery they stop them and search them for drugs.
💢Note:
see also "the jitters"
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Slang of the Day
🅿️ack heat
Ⓜ️eaning: to carry a gun
✔️For example:
🔺Someone in the crowd who was packing heat has been taken away by the Secret Service guys.
🔺Can you believe that some of these kids come to school packing heat? Where do they get the guns from?
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