"Kill two birds with one stone" comes to mind for some reason. I think I have used that one myself fairly recently.
I decided this rotation to add some daily idioms to start off each class lesson.
I'm starting off with the ones I find myself using frequently, but I thought I'd pitch the question to forum instructors, and even advanced learners.
What are some of your favorite idioms, and what are some you hear or use the most frequently?
Rather than organizing them around a weekly theme (i.e. color idioms, body idioms, etc.) I'd like to focus on ones they're more likely to hear.
On a funny side note, I included 'break a leg' in yesterday's list. After explaining what it meant, one of my students got a horrified look on her face, and said she'd hear her son say that his friend last week.
Thinking it was a literal meaning, she apparently reprimanded him for saying 'mean things' to other people, lecturing him on how he shouldn't be a bully, and should be kind to people, etc.
She said she didn't believe him when he tried telling her it was actually something nice, and thought he was just trying to avoid getting in trouble.![]()
Wear short sleeves! Support your right to bare arms!
"Kill two birds with one stone" comes to mind for some reason. I think I have used that one myself fairly recently.
I do like not my cup of tea.
Here's one:
They're on a roll.
The Syracuse team beat Virginia to get to the Final Four. They're on a roll. However, they play the Tar Heels next, and the Tar Heels are unstoppable. They are going to steamroll Syracuse. (Of course, I'll have to eat my words if the Tar Heels lose.)
Raining cats and dogs.
Pope of the Dictionary.com Forum
I like plain as a pikestaff, though it isn't used much today.
One of my favourite Aussie idioms.
Thirsty - "I'm as dry as a dead dingo's donger."
I use "I wouldn't touch it/him/her with a bargepole" quite a lot.
Remember - if you don't use correct capitalisation, punctuation and spacing, anything you write will be incorrect.
I am not a teacher.