This document contains a collection of proverbs and idioms related to various topics. The proverbs provide advice on different life situations through short, metaphorical sayings. The idioms describe common expressions involving colors, numbers, and animals. Some key proverbs include "You can lead a horse to water but you can't make it drink" meaning you can offer an opportunity but not force someone, and "Many hands make light work" meaning sharing work makes it easier. Example idioms are "in the black" meaning financially sound, and "beat a dead horse" meaning arguing a settled point. This collection offers a variety of traditional sayings about human behavior and experiences.
This document provides examples of common idioms related to different topics such as colours, numbers, and animals. Some examples include "in the black" meaning financially sound, "at sixes and sevens" meaning in a state of confusion, and "as innocent as a lamb" meaning having no guilt or being naive. A variety of idioms are explained that involve descriptive phrases associated with different subjects.
Cindy is a 16-year-old girl from Vigo, Spain who enjoys dancing, surfing the internet, and riding horses. She reads about a discotheque called "Tomorrow" in Santiago de Compostela and decides to go there, getting a ride from a man named Johnny who is actually the son of a millionaire. Johnny takes Cindy to his father's house to tend to her injuries. Cindy and Johnny fall in love and decide to get married on May 15th in La Colegiata church, living happily ever after.
The first collection by poet Jess Green is taken from her spoken word show set in an inner city secondary school suffering the cuts and blows of the Coalition government. Burning Books champions the underdogs; the unnoticed and unheard stories bearing the gritty reality of the UK’s education system.
Jess Green hit the headlines when her poem ‘Dear Mr Gove’ went viral with over 290,000 views in the first week of its release on YouTube. Since then she has won critical acclaim for her shows at the Edinburgh Fringe and has performed at festivals including Glastonbury. Her poetry resonates with audiences from school halls to festival tents. Jess has a solemn wit which seeks to bring social and political issues to the forefront of her personal stories.
St. Vincent de Paul Year 5 16.6 tuesday 16 juneNICOLEWHITE118
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The document provides the daily schedule and tasks for a Tuesday, including lessons in English, maths, science, and design technology. In English, students are asked to read and summarize a version of Little Red Riding Hood and to compare it to the original story. In maths, students will work on arithmetic and measurement. Science focuses on food chains, and design technology involves a creative sandwich project. Students are reminded to email if they need any help and that they are doing great with their work.
Mesrop is a 5th grade student who attends Mkhitar Sebastatsi educational complex. He enjoys playing video games like GTA and Assassin's Creed 4 where he can drive cars, as well as the game City Car Drive. Mesrop also likes reading, making presentations, going to the cinema, theatre, playing on his phone and watching TV.
Charlotte comes home from school and finds out from her mother Cat that she is having triplets. A few months later, Cat gives birth to triplets - Ainsley Ophelia, Baylie Cara, and Carlina Aimee. That night, Cat's sister Kimberly calls in tears saying she wants to commit suicide after problems with her husband Edwin. Cat goes to Kimberly's house to take her son Henry in to protect him. Kimberly then takes an overdose of pills.
This document provides a mind map overview of English future tenses including:
- The simple present, present continuous, be going to, will, future continuous, future perfect simple, and future perfect continuous tenses.
- Examples of how each tense is used to talk about events, schedules, intentions, predictions, promises, and expected situations in the future.
- Key distinctions like using will for predictions, promises, and offers while be going to expresses intentions and predictions based on present circumstances.
This document lists and defines 50 common English phrasal verbs, providing examples of how each is used. It defines phrasal verbs like "go on", "carry out", "set up", "pick up", and "go back", explaining their multiple meanings both literally and figuratively. The document serves as a reference for understanding common phrasal verbs and their usage.
This document lists and defines 50 common English phrasal verbs, providing examples of how each is used. The phrasal verbs cover a variety of meanings related to movement, communication, emotions, work, and more. Definitions include both literal and figurative uses. Examples illustrate how each phrasal verb is used in context.
Happiness is an Art Form by Agnes TorokBurning Eye
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This document contains a poem titled "This Is the Poem That Makes You Smile" by Agnes Török. The poem is a free verse work that aims to evoke feelings of happiness, nostalgia, and joy in the reader by describing sensations, memories, and experiences that typically elicit smiles. It suggests that the poem itself can trigger smiling by allowing the reader to fill it with their own meaningful recollections and things that make them happy. The poem was published in 2016 by Burning Eye Books as part of a larger collection.
The document provides biographical information about Sara Hirsch, a London-based performance poet. It notes that she was crowned UK Slam Champion in 2014 and came third in the World Slam Championships that year. It mentions that she runs poetry events and has toured the UK and abroad performing her work. The document encourages following Sara's Twitter handle @sarsbars89.
Ann provides a self-portrait in three sections. She describes her physical appearance as a 17-year old girl with long brown hair and brown eyes. She lists personality traits such as being smiley, creative, and optimistic. She discusses aspects of being a teenage girl, such as preferring comfort over style and spending time with friends. However, her reality does not match expectations, as she feels lonely and stressed with schoolwork. Finally, she shares idiosyncrasies and dreams of traveling to visit America and Paris and following her artistic dreams.
Kids moral story
Learn to Appreciate
Smartest Man in the World
Little Boy's Meeting with God
Story For Kids With Moral
moral story for kids
short stories with moral
short stories in english
short stories for children
english story for kids
short stories for kids,inspirational moral stories, good moral stories, very short stories with morals, story moral story,
1. The document introduces a group of 5 students from SMP Progresif Bumi Shalawat.
2. It provides definitions and generic structures of a narrative text, including orientation, complication, resolution, and reorientation/coda.
3. The story is about a sad Princess Charlita whose father the King holds a competition to make her happy again. Although others perform, no one succeeds until a young man takes her for a walk in the forest, which makes her smile, winning the competition and Princess Charlita's hand in marriage from the King.
KalaamiNew is a gazette published in July 2020. The editorial discusses how Kalaaminew, feeling envious of the attention given to Covid-19, decides to come out of her wardrobe and dress up to catch readers' attention and divert it from Covid-19. However, Covid-19, though ugly, has managed to attract everyone's full attention. The gazette also provides contact information for the publication and its team members.
This document lists 25 proverbs or sayings that convey advice and wisdom. Some of the proverbs explain that hard work leads to reward, an opportunity not taken cannot be forced, and one should learn from their mistakes. Others caution against destroying what provides wealth, delaying decisions for too long, and relying solely on wishes without action. The proverbs as a whole provide concise advice and observations about human behavior and life experiences.
50 idiomatic expressions you can use in your essays.mahanifareed
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This document lists and defines 50 common idiomatic expressions in English. It provides the idiom, its meaning, and an example sentence for each one. Some of the idioms covered include "ace" meaning to get an A on a test, "beat around the bush" meaning to avoid giving a direct answer, "burn the midnight oil" meaning to study late into the night, and "get it" meaning to understand something.
The document provides definitions and examples of how to use the modal verbs will, would, and used to. It explains that will is used for present intentions or habits while would is used for past intentions, imagined situations, or habitual actions in the past. Used to is used to talk about repeated events or states that no longer exist. The document gives many examples of how these modal verbs are properly used in different contexts like making requests, offers, predictions, or talking about typical behaviors.
50 idiomatic expresssions you must knowYazid GeeKz
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The document lists and defines 50 common idiomatic expressions in English. It provides the idiom, a definition, and example sentences for each one. Some of the idioms covered include "ace" meaning to get an A on a test, "beat around the bush" meaning to avoid giving a direct answer, "burn the midnight oil" meaning to study or work very late, and "get it" meaning to understand something, often in a negative sense. The document is intended to help readers learn idioms that are commonly used in written English.
This document contains 50 common English proverbs and idioms. It explores concepts like revenge not solving problems, the power of persuasion over force, adapting to local customs when traveling, getting better service by complaining, persevering through challenges, interdependence, bravery leading to success, not criticizing others' flaws, preparing for potential issues, being on time, similarity attracting people, pretending to befriend enemies for information, pictures communicating effectively, hidden costs in free things, comfort in familiar places, acting early for rewards, accepting unconditional gifts, compromises for great outcomes, self-reliance leading to achievement, too many voices causing confusion, windfalls easily lost, helping relationships need care, impermanence of positives, adapting
The document contains examples of conditional sentences using different types of conditional structures. There are 9 activities with multiple examples of conditional sentences discussing various hypothetical situations like forgetting keys, education levels, spending habits, exam results, beauty standards, prison escapes, purchases, hobbies and more. The sentences demonstrate how to construct conditional sentences using different tenses to discuss possible, unlikely, or imaginary scenarios.
This document provides definitions and examples for common English idioms and expressions that use different colors. It explains the meanings of 15 different idioms using colors such as red, black, green, white, blue, and yellow. For each idiom, it gives the meaning and provides an example sentence to illustrate how that idiom is used. The idioms cover a range of meanings related to appearance, permission, location, simplification, emotions, and more.
The document defines common idioms and phrases:
1) The sky's the limit means the possibilities are endless.
2) An elephant in the room refers to an obvious problem no one wants to discuss.
3) Off the top of my head means without giving it much thought or precise knowledge.
4) A fifth wheel is someone not needed in a group.
This document contains a collection of English proverbs and idioms. Some of the key proverbs summarized are:
- A bad excuse is better than none - It is better to provide an excuse, even a poor one, rather than providing no excuse at all.
- A bird in hand is worth two in a bush - It is better to keep what you have rather than risk losing it by searching for something better.
- A friend in need is a friend indeed - Someone who helps you in times of trouble is a real friend.
- A leopard cannot change its spots - A person cannot fundamentally change their basic nature or character.
The document discusses common idiomatic expressions, which are phrases with meanings that differ from the literal definitions of the individual words. It provides 20 examples of common idioms along with their figurative meanings. For instance, the idiom "add insult to injury" means to make a bad situation worse, rather than literally adding an insult on top of an injury. The document aims to help readers understand the non-literal meanings behind frequent idiomatic phrases in English.
The document discusses modal verbs in English. Some key points:
- Modal verbs behave differently than regular verbs and don't take "-s" in the third person. Common modal verbs are can, could, may, might, must, ought to, shall, should, will, would.
- Each modal verb has specific meanings and uses, such as expressing ability, permission, possibility, certainty, obligation, recommendations, predictions, and more.
- Modal verbs are not used in past tenses or future tenses. For example, "He will can go" is incorrect.
- Examples are provided to illustrate the meanings and uses of each modal verb.
This document lists and defines 50 common English phrasal verbs, providing examples of how each is used. The phrasal verbs cover a variety of meanings related to movement, communication, emotions, work, and more. Definitions include both literal and figurative uses. Examples illustrate how each phrasal verb is used in context.
Happiness is an Art Form by Agnes TorokBurning Eye
Ìý
This document contains a poem titled "This Is the Poem That Makes You Smile" by Agnes Török. The poem is a free verse work that aims to evoke feelings of happiness, nostalgia, and joy in the reader by describing sensations, memories, and experiences that typically elicit smiles. It suggests that the poem itself can trigger smiling by allowing the reader to fill it with their own meaningful recollections and things that make them happy. The poem was published in 2016 by Burning Eye Books as part of a larger collection.
The document provides biographical information about Sara Hirsch, a London-based performance poet. It notes that she was crowned UK Slam Champion in 2014 and came third in the World Slam Championships that year. It mentions that she runs poetry events and has toured the UK and abroad performing her work. The document encourages following Sara's Twitter handle @sarsbars89.
Ann provides a self-portrait in three sections. She describes her physical appearance as a 17-year old girl with long brown hair and brown eyes. She lists personality traits such as being smiley, creative, and optimistic. She discusses aspects of being a teenage girl, such as preferring comfort over style and spending time with friends. However, her reality does not match expectations, as she feels lonely and stressed with schoolwork. Finally, she shares idiosyncrasies and dreams of traveling to visit America and Paris and following her artistic dreams.
Kids moral story
Learn to Appreciate
Smartest Man in the World
Little Boy's Meeting with God
Story For Kids With Moral
moral story for kids
short stories with moral
short stories in english
short stories for children
english story for kids
short stories for kids,inspirational moral stories, good moral stories, very short stories with morals, story moral story,
1. The document introduces a group of 5 students from SMP Progresif Bumi Shalawat.
2. It provides definitions and generic structures of a narrative text, including orientation, complication, resolution, and reorientation/coda.
3. The story is about a sad Princess Charlita whose father the King holds a competition to make her happy again. Although others perform, no one succeeds until a young man takes her for a walk in the forest, which makes her smile, winning the competition and Princess Charlita's hand in marriage from the King.
KalaamiNew is a gazette published in July 2020. The editorial discusses how Kalaaminew, feeling envious of the attention given to Covid-19, decides to come out of her wardrobe and dress up to catch readers' attention and divert it from Covid-19. However, Covid-19, though ugly, has managed to attract everyone's full attention. The gazette also provides contact information for the publication and its team members.
This document lists 25 proverbs or sayings that convey advice and wisdom. Some of the proverbs explain that hard work leads to reward, an opportunity not taken cannot be forced, and one should learn from their mistakes. Others caution against destroying what provides wealth, delaying decisions for too long, and relying solely on wishes without action. The proverbs as a whole provide concise advice and observations about human behavior and life experiences.
50 idiomatic expressions you can use in your essays.mahanifareed
Ìý
This document lists and defines 50 common idiomatic expressions in English. It provides the idiom, its meaning, and an example sentence for each one. Some of the idioms covered include "ace" meaning to get an A on a test, "beat around the bush" meaning to avoid giving a direct answer, "burn the midnight oil" meaning to study late into the night, and "get it" meaning to understand something.
The document provides definitions and examples of how to use the modal verbs will, would, and used to. It explains that will is used for present intentions or habits while would is used for past intentions, imagined situations, or habitual actions in the past. Used to is used to talk about repeated events or states that no longer exist. The document gives many examples of how these modal verbs are properly used in different contexts like making requests, offers, predictions, or talking about typical behaviors.
50 idiomatic expresssions you must knowYazid GeeKz
Ìý
The document lists and defines 50 common idiomatic expressions in English. It provides the idiom, a definition, and example sentences for each one. Some of the idioms covered include "ace" meaning to get an A on a test, "beat around the bush" meaning to avoid giving a direct answer, "burn the midnight oil" meaning to study or work very late, and "get it" meaning to understand something, often in a negative sense. The document is intended to help readers learn idioms that are commonly used in written English.
This document contains 50 common English proverbs and idioms. It explores concepts like revenge not solving problems, the power of persuasion over force, adapting to local customs when traveling, getting better service by complaining, persevering through challenges, interdependence, bravery leading to success, not criticizing others' flaws, preparing for potential issues, being on time, similarity attracting people, pretending to befriend enemies for information, pictures communicating effectively, hidden costs in free things, comfort in familiar places, acting early for rewards, accepting unconditional gifts, compromises for great outcomes, self-reliance leading to achievement, too many voices causing confusion, windfalls easily lost, helping relationships need care, impermanence of positives, adapting
The document contains examples of conditional sentences using different types of conditional structures. There are 9 activities with multiple examples of conditional sentences discussing various hypothetical situations like forgetting keys, education levels, spending habits, exam results, beauty standards, prison escapes, purchases, hobbies and more. The sentences demonstrate how to construct conditional sentences using different tenses to discuss possible, unlikely, or imaginary scenarios.
This document provides definitions and examples for common English idioms and expressions that use different colors. It explains the meanings of 15 different idioms using colors such as red, black, green, white, blue, and yellow. For each idiom, it gives the meaning and provides an example sentence to illustrate how that idiom is used. The idioms cover a range of meanings related to appearance, permission, location, simplification, emotions, and more.
The document defines common idioms and phrases:
1) The sky's the limit means the possibilities are endless.
2) An elephant in the room refers to an obvious problem no one wants to discuss.
3) Off the top of my head means without giving it much thought or precise knowledge.
4) A fifth wheel is someone not needed in a group.
This document contains a collection of English proverbs and idioms. Some of the key proverbs summarized are:
- A bad excuse is better than none - It is better to provide an excuse, even a poor one, rather than providing no excuse at all.
- A bird in hand is worth two in a bush - It is better to keep what you have rather than risk losing it by searching for something better.
- A friend in need is a friend indeed - Someone who helps you in times of trouble is a real friend.
- A leopard cannot change its spots - A person cannot fundamentally change their basic nature or character.
The document discusses common idiomatic expressions, which are phrases with meanings that differ from the literal definitions of the individual words. It provides 20 examples of common idioms along with their figurative meanings. For instance, the idiom "add insult to injury" means to make a bad situation worse, rather than literally adding an insult on top of an injury. The document aims to help readers understand the non-literal meanings behind frequent idiomatic phrases in English.
The document discusses modal verbs in English. Some key points:
- Modal verbs behave differently than regular verbs and don't take "-s" in the third person. Common modal verbs are can, could, may, might, must, ought to, shall, should, will, would.
- Each modal verb has specific meanings and uses, such as expressing ability, permission, possibility, certainty, obligation, recommendations, predictions, and more.
- Modal verbs are not used in past tenses or future tenses. For example, "He will can go" is incorrect.
- Examples are provided to illustrate the meanings and uses of each modal verb.
This document provides explanations and meanings for various common proverbs and sayings. It includes proverbs such as "absence makes the heart grow fonder" meaning being away from someone you love makes you love them more, "actions speak louder than words" meaning what someone does is more important than what they say, and "a stitch in time saves nine" meaning it's better to deal with a problem early before it gets worse. The document contains explanations of over 50 common proverbs and sayings.
This document defines and provides examples of common modal verbs in English. It discusses how modal verbs differ from regular verbs in terms of conjugation. The modal verbs covered include can, could, may, might, must, ought to, shall, should, will, would, have to, have got to, had better, and must. Examples are provided to illustrate the different meanings and uses of each modal verb. Common uses include expressing ability, permission, possibility, necessity, obligation, advice, and more. Exercises with multiple choice questions are also included to reinforce understanding of modal verb usage.
This document provides explanations and meanings for various common proverbs and sayings. Some key proverbs summarized include:
- Absence makes the heart grow fonder - Being away from someone you love makes you love them more.
- Actions speak louder than words - What someone does is more important than what they say.
- A bird in hand is worth two in the bush - It's better to keep what you have than risk losing it.
- A friend in need is a friend indeed - Someone who helps you in trouble is a real friend.
- All that glitters is not gold - Appearances can be deceptive.
- An apple a day keeps the doctor away - Eating
This document contains a dictionary of over 2,800 English idiomatic expressions and their meanings. It provides the definition for common idioms and sayings beginning with letters A through D, including "a bit much," "a day late and a dollar short," "a fool and his money are soon parted," and "a little learning is a dangerous thing." Each entry includes the idiomatic phrase along with a short explanation of its meaning in everyday use.
This document provides examples and explanations of complex passive voice structures in English. It discusses passive constructions with "it is said/claimed/reported" followed by a "that" clause, verbs followed by an indirect object and infinitive or gerund, verbs like "see" and "make" followed by an object and bare infinitive, structures with "want", "like", "love" followed by an object and infinitive or gerund, verbs like "recommend" and "suggest" followed by a gerund, active verbs followed by prepositions, and the passive construction "have something done".
An idiom is a commonly used expression that has a special meaning different from the literal meaning of the words. Some examples of English idioms provided are "a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush" meaning having something certain is better than risking losing everything, "a blessing in disguise" meaning something good that is not recognized at first, and "a fool and his money are easily parted" meaning it is easy for a foolish person to lose their money. The document provides definitions for several other common English idiomatic expressions.
This document contains summaries of many common English proverbs and sayings, providing brief explanations of their meanings. Some of the proverbs explained include "A rolling stone gathers no moss", "A friend in need is a friend indeed", and "Tomorrow is another day". The document covers a wide range of topics related to work, relationships, opportunities, and more.
The document discusses the use of modal verbs to express:
1. Different levels of certainty about events from complete certainty to weak possibility.
2. Obligations and permissions, including strong and weak obligations, prohibitions, recommendations, willingness, and permission.
3. Ability using can and could.
This document provides information on sentence types and structures:
- It defines simple, compound, and complex sentences. Simple sentences have one subject and one predicate, compound sentences join two independent clauses, and complex sentences have one independent and one dependent clause.
- The key parts of a sentence are identified as the subject, which indicates what the sentence is about, and the predicate, which describes the subject.
- Common sentence problems like fragments, run-ons, and comma splices are explained along with ways to fix them such as adding a subject or predicate, using coordinating conjunctions, or setting off clauses with commas.
- Joining sentences in various ways using FANBOYS conjunctions and semic
This document provides definitions and explanations for common English proverbs and idioms. Some examples included are:
- "Between the devil and the deep sea" which refers to choosing between two equally bad alternatives.
- "Where there's a will there's a way" which means that with determination, a person can achieve what they want.
- "A burnt child dreads fire" referring to how a traumatic past experience can shape one's future attitudes and thinking.
The document explains the first conditional, which is used to talk about possible situations in the present or future. The first conditional follows an "if clause" with a main clause connected by "will." Examples are provided such as "If it's sunny, we'll go to the park" and "If you cook the supper, I'll wash the dishes." The first conditional expresses possibilities that may occur based on certain conditions. Exercises are included for the reader to practice forming first conditional sentences.
This formal letter template provides guidance for writing a clear and targeted letter. The introduction paragraph states the reason for writing. The following paragraph provides more details about the purpose. The last paragraph restates the reason for writing and thanks the reader for their time. The template emphasizes keeping the letter simple and focused so the intent is obvious to the reader.
This document lists and defines over 30 common foreign phrases used in English, along with examples. Some of the phrases include:
- A la carte - with separate prices for each menu item; ordering from such a menu.
- Alfresco - outdoors; in the open air.
- Alma mater - one's school or university from which one graduated.
- Avant-garde - associated with new or experimental artistic styles or techniques.
- C'est la vie - "that's life"; used to accept things one cannot change.
- Curriculum vitae - a resume that lists one's education and professional qualifications.
This document discusses direct and indirect speech. It defines direct speech as using quotation marks to report someone's exact words. Indirect speech reports the general idea without exact words. When changing direct speech to indirect speech, pronouns and verbs are adjusted based on tense and time. Questions are changed to statements and introduced with if, whether, or a question word. Imperative statements become requests using "to" before the verb. This allows reported conversations and ideas to be restated while adjusting for grammar and context.
This document defines and provides examples of compound sentences. A compound sentence joins two independent clauses with a coordinating conjunction like "and", "but", or "or" or with a semicolon. Independent clauses can stand alone as sentences and contain a subject and verb. Choppy sentences can be improved by combining independent clauses into compound sentences. The document demonstrates how to identify independent clauses and provides examples of compound sentences using coordinating conjunctions and semicolons.
The document provides an overview of key concepts in object-oriented design, including objects, classes, inheritance, encapsulation, and polymorphism. It discusses how objects contain data and methods that operate on the data, and classes act as templates for creating objects. Inheritance allows new classes to extend existing classes, reusing and modifying their attributes and methods. Encapsulation involves objects communicating through messages and hiding their internal data within methods.
1. Proverbs:
1. You can lead a horse to water but you can't make it drink.
You can offer someone an opportunity to do something but you can't force them.
2. Stolen fruit is the sweetest.
What is forbidden is the most tempting.
3. Poverty waits at the gates of idleness.
If you do not work you will not make money.
4. Many hands make light work.
Sharing work makes work easier.
5. You can't teach an old dog new tricks.
A person who is used to doing things a certain way cannot change.
6. Kill the goose that lays the golden egg.
Destroy something that would be a source of wealth or success.
7. Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me.
One should learn from one's mistakes.
8. Every path has its puddle.
Progress is rarely without difficulty.
9. Diligence is the mother of good fortune.
Hard work brings rewards.
10. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
Different people have different tastes.
11.A new broom sweeps clean.
A newly-appointed person makes changes energetically.
12. A good beginning makes a good end.
If a task is carefully planned, there's a better chance that it will be done well.
2. 13. A burnt child dreads the fire.
A bad experience will make people stay away from certain things.
14. A young idler, an old beggar.
If you don't work, you won't have any money when you're old
15.He who hesitates is lost.
If you delay your decision too long, you may miss a good opportunity.
16. If wishes were horses, then beggars would ride.
Wishing alone is of no use; you must act as well.
17. An empty purse frightens away friends.
When one's financial situation deteriorates, friends tend to disappear.
18. A friend's eye is a good mirror.
A real friend will tell you the truth.
19. A guilty conscience needs no accuser.
It means you're already beating yourself up over whatever it was you did, so you
don't need anyone to tell you what you did was bad.
20. Dogs of the same street bark alike.
People from the same background have the same behaviour.
21. Every ass likes to hear himself bray.
People like to listen to themselves talking.
22. Kill one to warn a hundred.
Warn many by punishing a few.
23. Liars need good memories.
Liars need to be double careful to escape justification. If you are a liar person and
you are always telling lies you'd better to remember what is the lie you are telling,
because if you don't do it, they will spot you.
3. 24. Unwillingness easily finds an excuse.
A person who doesn't want to do something always finds a reason to avoid it.
25. You are never too old to learn.
There is no wrong time to begin a right thing
IDIOMS RELATED TO COLOURS
In the black: To say that a person or organization is in the black means that they
are financially sound, have a positive balance on their account and that they owe
no money.
Black and white: To say that something is in black and white means that there is
written proof of it. "It's an obligation. It's written in black and white in your
contract."
Black sheep: The black sheep of the family is one who is very different from the
others, and least respected by the other members of the family.
Blue around the gills: If a person looks blue around the gills, they look unwell or
sick. "You should sit down. You look a bit blue around the gills."
Blue in the face: If you do something until you're blue in the face, you try
unsuccessfully to do something for a very long time. "I explained the situation
until I was blue in the face but she wouldn't change her mind."
Blue-eyed boy: A blue-eyed boy is somebody's favourite e.g. he's the director's
blue-eyed boy!
4. Golden handcuffs: The term golden handcuffs refers to a large sum of money or a
generous financial arrangement granted to an executive as an incentive to stay in
their job, or to ensure long-term cooperation after their departure.
Golden opportunity: A golden opportunity is a favourable time or excellent
occasion which should not be missed.
Grey existence: To have a grey existence is to lead a dull, monotonous life.
Tickled pink: To say that someone is tickled pink means that they are extremely
amused or pleased.
To be in the red: If a person or organization is in the red, they owe money or have
a negative account.
Roll out the red carpet: To roll out the red carpet means to give special treatment
to an important or honoured visitor.
Catch someone red-handed: If a person is caught red-handed, they are caught
while they are doing something wrong or illegal.
Silver spoon: Saying that someone was born with a silver spoon in their mouth
means that their family is very rich and privileged.
See red: If someone sees red, they suddenly become very angry or annoyed
about something.
"Discrimination of any kind makes me see red!"
IDIOMS RELATED TO NUMBER
1. at sixes and sevens
- in a state of confusion
5. The workers were at sixes and sevens after the company announced that it was
going out of business.
2. at the eleventh hour
- at the last possible moment
At the eleventh hour the city and the garbage collectors settled their contract
dispute.
3. cast the first stone
- to be the first to criticize or attack someone
I told my friend that he should be careful not to cast the first stone in an
argument.
4. catch-22
- a situation in which whatever decision is made the outcome will have negative
consequences, a basically no-win situation
5. dressed to the nines
- to be dressed in one's best clothes
The woman at the concert was dressed to the nines.
6. kill two birds with one stone
- to achieve two aims with one effort or action
6. If I take the course now I may be able to kill two birds with one stone and not
have to take it again.
7. six feet under
- dead and buried
My uncle has been six feet under for over five years now.
8. nine-day wonder
- someone or something who briefly attracts a lot of attention
The man was a nine-day wonder and was soon forgotten by most people at his
former company.
9. like two peas in a pod
- very close or intimate, very similar
The two girls are like two peas in a pod and are very good friends.
10. have two left feet
- to move in a very awkward way when you dance
The man has two left feet and he is a very bad dancer.
The golfer got a hole in one during his first round of golf.
11. bat a thousand
7. - to be extremely successful at something
Recently, I have been batting a thousand in my attempts to sell the new product.
12. back to square one
- back to where one started
We were forced to go back to square one in our efforts to change the name of the
company.
13. catch forty winks
- to take a nap, to get some sleep
I drove all night until I was very tired so I stopped to catch forty winks.
14. in two minds about (something)
- to be undecided about something
My niece is in two minds about whether or not she will visit me this summer.
15. two's company, three's a crowd
- two people (usually a couple on a date) are happier when nobody else is around
My friend wanted to come with my girlfriend and myself but I told him that two's
company and three's a crowd so he stayed home.
8. IDIOMS RELATED TO ANIMALS
1. as innocent as a lamb
- having no guilt, naive
The little girl is as innocent as a lamb and everybody loves her.
2. back the wrong horse
- to support someone or something that cannot or does not win or succeed
We backed the wrong horse when we supported the candidate for mayor.
3. beat a dead horse
- to continue fighting a battle that has been won, to continue to argue a point that
has been settled
I was beating a dead horse when I was arguing with my boss.
4. buy a pig in a poke
- to buy something without seeing it or knowing anything about it
You can buy the used computer but it will be like buying a pig in a poke if you do
not look at it first.
5. call the dogs off
- to stop threatening or chasing or hounding someone
9. The police decided to call the dogs off and stop hunting for the man.
6. cast pearls before a swine
- to waste something on someone who will not be thankful or care about it
Giving the jewellery to the woman will be casting pearls before swine. She will not
appreciate it at all.
7. a cat in gloves catches no mice
- if you are too careful and polite you may not get what you want
A cat in gloves catches no mice and I advised my friend that he should be more
aggressive at work or he will not be successful.
8. a cock-and-bull story
- a silly story that is not true
Our neighbor gave us a cock-and-bull story about how our window was broken.
9. a dark horse
- a candidate who is little known to the general public
The candidate for mayor was a dark horse until he gave some good speeches on
TV.
10. dog-eat-dog
10. - ready or willing to fight and hurt others to get what one wants
It is a dog-eat-dog world in our company.
11.every dog has his day
- everyone will have his chance or turn, everyone will get what he deserves
"Don`t worry about him. Every dog has his day and he will eventually suffer for all
the bad things that he is doing."
12. have a tiger by the tail
- to have a task or situation that you are not prepared for or which is a bigger
challenge that you expected
The politician had a tiger by the tail as he tried to manage the large problem.
13. hit the bulls-eye
- to reach or focus on the main point of something
Our manager hit the bulls-eye when he talked about the problems in the
company.
14. let sleeping dogs lie
- do not make trouble if you do not have to
You should let sleeping dogs lie and not ask our boss about the dispute.
11. 15. like lambs to the slaughter
- quietly and without complaining about the dangers that may lie ahead
Our football team went like lambs to the slaughter to play against the best
football team in the country.