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Title: idioms
Description: quickly revisable idioms set

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A List of the most commonly used English idioms
A hot potato
Speak of an issue which many people are talking about and which is usually disputed

A penny for your thoughts

Caught between two stools
When someone finds it difficult to choose between two alternatives
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A way of asking what someone is thinking

Cross that bridge when you come to it

Actions speak louder than words

People's intentions can be judged better by what they do than what they say
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Cry over spilt milk

Add insult to injury
To further a loss with mockery or indignity; to worsen an unfavorable situation
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Curiosity killed the cat

Very expensive or costly
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Being Inquisitive can lead you into an unpleasant situation
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Cut corners

Back to the drawing board

Cut the mustard

When something is done badly to save money
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To succeed; to come up to expectations; adequate enough to compete or participate

Ball is in your court

Devil's Advocate

It is up to you to make the next decision or step

To present a counter argument

Barking up the wrong tree

Don't count your chickens before the eggs have hatched

Looking in the wrong place
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Don't give up the day job

Be glad to see the back of
Be happy when a person leaves
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You could definitely not do it professionally
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Not speaking directly about the issue
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Drastic times call for drastic measures

Best of both worlds
Meaning: All the advantages
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Elvis has left the building

Best thing since sliced bread

A good invention or innovation
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The show has come to an end
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Bite off more than you can chew

Every cloud has a silver lining

To take on a task that is way to big
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Blessing in disguise

Far cry from

Something good that isn't recognized at first
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Burn the midnight oil
To work late into the night, alluding to the time before electric lighting
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Meaning: Feeling slightly ill
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Commonly used smart idioms - English | Available from http://www
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org/smart-idioms
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Crazy, demented, out of one's mind, in a confused or befuddled state of mind, senile
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Once in a blue moon

Hit the sack / sheets / hay

To go to bed
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In the heat of the moment

Picture paints a thousand words

Overwhelmed by what is happening in the moment
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It takes two to tango

Piece of cake

Actions or communications need more than one person

A job, task or other activity that is easy or simple
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This means to deceive someone into thinking well of them
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This idiom is used to say that two (or more people) agree on something
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Last straw

Speak of the devil!

The final problem in a series of problems
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Let sleeping dogs lie
Do not disturb a situation as it is - since it would result in trouble or complications
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Taste of your own medicine

Make a long story short
Come to the point - leave out details

Means that something happens to you, or is done to you, that you have done to someone else

To hear something straight from the horse's mouth

Method to my madness
An assertion that, despite one's approach seeming random, there actually is structure to it
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Steal someone's thunder
To take the credit for something someone else did
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To hear something from the authoritative source
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All of it
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smart-words
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html © 2012

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Title: idioms
Description: quickly revisable idioms set