[Idiom] idioms meaning "to avoid showing any emotion"

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Olenek

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Hi, :)

There are two idioms meaning "to avoid showing any emotion, esp. amusement":

To keep a straight face
To keep one’s countenance

I think that the 1st one is more common. Am I right?
Do you use other idioms with this sense?

Many thanks for all your answers! :up:
 

Verona_82

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I'm not sure about amusement, but a person can have a poker face (showing no expression on their face) :)
 

BobK

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I'm not sure about amusement, but a person can have a poker face (showing no expression on their face) :)

:up: And just as someone with a poker face doesn't have to be playing poker (although showing no expression is a good idea in that context), a person can be said to 'be playing his/her cards close to his/her chest' although no playing cards are actually involved.

b
 

Verona_82

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I thought "not bat an eye/eyelid" might also be worth mentioning.
When somebody doesn't bat an eye, they don't show any reaction, especially when something unusual happens. I guess it's a good one when describing someone who doesn't seem shocked or surpised or upset.

When I told my boyfriend I wanted to go to Europe for six months alone, he didn't bat an eyelid. Now I'm wondering if he loves me at all. :)
 

Olenek

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The British idiom "Not turn a hair" mean to not seem at all surprised or shocked.
For example: "I was expecting her to be furious but she didn't turn a hair".

I'm not sure whether it is common.
 

freezeframe

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give a blank stare
have a blank face
 

SanMar

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Stiff upper lip.
This is a fairly known British idiom, although not really used in Canada.
But maybe the Brits should confirm if I have used it correctly.

Not a teacher.
:)
 

freezeframe

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Stiff upper lip.
This is a fairly known British idiom, although not really used in Canada.
But maybe the Brits should confirm if I have used it correctly.

Not a teacher.
:)

I think stiff upper lip means not showing negative emotions. For example, if something is upsetting. I don't think it's used for not showing amusement. But I could be wrong. All my knowledge about the UK derives from Father Ted*. :-D




* Slight exaggeration.


AC/DC - Stiff upper lip
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7yJNlRBF0rk
 

SanMar

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Tdol

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I would agree. It is normally said to keep one from breaking down.:cry::)
As far as I know.


Not a teacher.

It is, though it isn't used that much nowadays IMO.
 

BobK

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Stiff upper lip.
This is a fairly known British idiom, although not really used in Canada.
But maybe the Brits should confirm if I have used it correctly.

Not a teacher.
:)

Very British. Children of Victorian parents were expected (and admonished) to keep a stiff upper lip when they were sent away to boarding school; keeping a stiff upper lip stopped them breaking down in floods of tears.

Another very British one - which doesn't mean the same, although it's related in that it is emotionless - is keeping 'a straight bat' (a reference to a safe cricketing stroke).

b
 

konungursvia

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Has anyone mentioned "to keep a straight face" or "Jimmy Carter is a great man?" Oh, only the former is relevant. Oh well.
 

freezeframe

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Has anyone mentioned "to keep a straight face" or "Jimmy Carter is a great man?" Oh, only the former is relevant. Oh well.

FDR, who was a greater man, had a great poker face.
 

dangauss

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The expression often used in American newspapers and on the news is: stone-faced.

i.e. The defendant sat stone-faced in the courtroom as the verdict was read.

The expression: without batting an eye is also used sometimes. This means you do something and do not even blink your eyes to indicate any type of feeling. The criminal pointed his gun at the teller and, without batting an eye, she told him to go to hell.
 

BobK

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That reminds me of a cliche often used in sports commentaries: 'Fergusson sat tight-lipped and ashen-faced as his team had rings run round them'. It's clear that he's not happy, but he doesn't react in a way that would give more specific information about what's making him unhappy.

b
 
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tks499

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Olenek

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The expression often used in American newspapers and on the news is: stone-faced.

Oh yes! I remember this expression -
Oliver Barret IV called his father Old Stonyface (Old Stony) in "Love Story" by Erich Segal. :)
 

BobK

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I think stiff upper lip means not showing negative emotions. For example, if something is upsetting. I don't think it's used for not showing amusement. But I could be wrong. All my knowledge about the UK derives from Father Ted*. :-D




* Slight exaggeration.


AC/DC - Stiff upper lip
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7yJNlRBF0rk

:up: Not showing amusement is 'po-faced' or 'strait-laced' [students should note the spelling: it's a reference to tightly laced corsets, which both went with a puritanical world-view and incidentally made it painful to laugh. The word 'strait' is chiefly used now to refer to a narrow piece of sea; the French étroit is related, as are 'dire straits' - a metaphor that means 'a tight spot' [which itself is a metaphor!] that refers to such a sea-passage]

b
 
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