📔 Down to earth
📋Meaning
To be practical and sensible.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “It’s a stereotype, but Dutch people are known for being down to earth.”
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📔 Salt of the earth
📋Meaning
Being honest and good.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “My father is the salt of the earth. He works hard and always helps people who are in need.”
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📔 Break the ice
📋Meaning
To attempt to become friends with someone.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “He made a weather joke to break the ice.”
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📔 Sell ice to Eskimos
📋Meaning
To be able to sell anything to anyone; to persuade people to go against their best interests or to accept something unnecessary or preposterous.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “He’s a gifted salesman, he could sell ice to Eskimos."
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📔 Let the dust settle
📋Meaning
To allow a situation to become calm or normal again after something exciting or unusual has happened.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “You just had big news yesterday, let the dust settle and don’t make any decisions yet.”
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📔 Clear as mud
📋Meaning
Not clear at all, not easy to understand.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “He’s a great scientist, but I find his explanation of bacteria and microbes as clear as mud.”
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📔 have known better days
📋Meaning
To be or look particularly shabby, ill-kept, or in poor condition.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣Well, this car has known better days, but it's been reliable for me since the day I bought it 20 years ago.
🗣The poor guy who runs the building is a sweet fellow, but he has certainly known better days by the looks of him.
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📔receive (one's) just deserts
📋To receive that which one deserves, especially a punishment or unfavorable outcome. (Note: The phrase is often misspelled as "just desserts," due to the pronunciation of "deserts" and "desserts" being the same in this context.)
🗣The CEO cheated his clients out of nearly $4 million, but he received his just deserts when he was stripped of everything he owned and sent to prison.
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📔 Potemkin village
📋Meaning
Something that is made to seem very grand, elaborate, or prosperous for the purposes of impressing others, but which in reality has no real worth or substance. Taken from a story about Russian minister Grigory Potemkin (1739–1791), who allegedly erected false, painted façades to mimic a thriving, successful village along the Dnieper River in Crimea to impress the visiting Empress Catherine II.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣The tightly controlled totalitarian country is often accused of creating a Potemkin village each time it televises some event, a meager attempt to convince the outside world that its people are happy under the thumb of the dictatorship.
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📔knock (one's) head against a/the wall
📋To attempt continuously and fruitlessly to accomplish some task or achieve some goal that is or seems ultimately hopeless.
🗣Some people are never going to agree with you on this, so it's no use knocking your head against a wall trying to convince everyone.
🗣I feel like I've been knocking my head against the wall trying to understand this math equation.
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📔 out there
📋Meaning
Somewhat unusual, unconventional, crazy, or eccentric. Sometimes hyphenated.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣Our manager is always coming up with some out-there ideas on how to improve productivity.
🗣My uncle Jerry is a little out there, but he's a really sweet guy.
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📔need (something) (about) as much as (one) needs a hole in the head
📋To have absolutely no need or use for something.
🗣I'm perfectly happy having a cell phone that just makes phone calls—I need a fancy new smartphone about as much as I need a hole in the head.
🗣We have enough problems with the business as it is, so we need an audit as much as we need a hole in the head.
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📔 go through the roof
📋Meaning
to become very angry or upset
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 When they realized he'd lied to them, his parents went through the roof.
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📔 sitting duck
📋Meaning
a person or thing with no protection against an attack or other source of danger.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 Nancy knew she'd be a sitting duck when she raised the trap door.
🗣The senator was a sitting duck because of his unpopular position on school reform.
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📔 one-up (someone)
📋Meaning
To make a point of outdoing, outperforming, outclassing, etc., someone.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣I hate telling stories around Jack because he always tries to one-up you with some fabulous anecdote of his own.
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📔 tear a strip off (someone)
📋Meaning
To scold, upbraid, or rebuke someone very severely, as for an error or wrongdoing.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣The teacher really tore a strip off me for causing a disruption in class again.
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📔lap of the gods
📋A state beyond possible human control, intervention, or responsibility; a state or condition that is or will be decided by nature or fate. Usually used in the phrase "in the lap of the gods."
🗣I'm afraid we've done all we can to treat your father's heart attack. His recovery is in the lap of the gods, now.
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💠collect dust
✍🏾To be in a state of disuse for a prolonged period of time.
Why do you want another video game console? You already have three collecting dust under the television!
My father has lots of old trinkets and memorabilia collecting dust in the attic.
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📔live and kicking
📋Alive, healthy, and alert. (A truncated version of "alive and kicking.")
🗣Sam: "How are you feeling, John? I heard you were quite sick recently." John: "I'm still live and kicking!"
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📔 pester (someone) for (something)
📋Meaning
To continually annoy someone with requests for something.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣I wish you would stop pestering me for a new bicycle; your birthday will be here soon enough!
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📔 As cold as stone
📋Meaning
Being very cold and unemotional.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “In the Victorian times, many women were told to suppress their feelings and, thus, appeared as cold as stone.”
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📔 Between a rock and a hard place
📋Meaning
In difficulty, faced with a choice between two unsatisfactory options.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “I can understand why she couldn’t make up her mind about what to do. She’s really between a rock and a hard place.”
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📔 Nip something in the bud
📋Meaning
To stop a bad situation from becoming worse by taking action at an early stage of its development.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “When the kid shows the first signs of misbehaving, you should nip that bad behavior in the bud.”
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📔 Barking up the wrong tree
📋Meaning
Doing something that won’t give you the results you want.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “If you think she’s going to lend you money, you’re barking up the wrong tree. She never lends anyone anything.”
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📔 Out of the woods
📋Meaning
The situation is still difficult but it’s improved or gotten easier. The hardest part of something is over.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 “The surgery went very well and he just needs to recover now, so he’s officially out of the woods.”
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📔 a heart of gold
📋Meaning
a kind and generous disposition
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣 A woman with a heart of gold gives us lodging for the night.
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🙌Join them all👏
📔 wide berth
📋Meaning
A good distance (between things, people, etc.). Originally referred to ships.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣Once I learned that there was a lice outbreak, I kept a wide berth from all of my students for the rest of the day.
🗣We've been keeping a wide berth from John ever since he dumped our good friend.
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📔 be not short of a penny (or two)
📋Meaning
To be exceptionally wealthy; to have no concerns regarding money.
🤔For example ⬇️
🗣A: "I just heard Sarah just lost her job!" B: "Well, her husband's family isn't short of a penny, so I think they'll be just fine."
🗣I once dated a guy who, though he was never short of a penny or two, was the most miserly person I'd ever met. He wouldn't even tip when we went out to eat!
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