Clothing Idioms

Clothing Idioms
idiommeaningexample sentence
at the drop of a hatwithout needing any advance noticeMy Grandma will babysit for anyone at the drop of a hat.
(have a) bee in one's bonnetsomething that is annoying someoneMilan has had a bee in his bonnet all day, but he won't tell me what's wrong.
below the beltbeyond what is fair or socially acceptableHis comment about Manfred's handicap was below the belt.
bursting at the seamsnot fitting anymoreI ate too much. I'm bursting at the seams in these jeans.
caught with one's pants downunpreparedMy students caught me with my pants down on Monday. I forgot about the field trip.
(have a) card up one's sleevehave a secret or reserve planI think Josh has a card up his sleeve cause he wants me to wear a dress to the fast-food restaurant.
buckle downwork extra hardIt's almost exam time, so I need to buckle down this weekend.
burn a hole in one's pocketmoney that one is tempted to spendLet's go to the mall after school. There's a hundred dollar bill burning a hole in my pocket.
dress to kill, dress to the ninesdress in nice or sexy clothesMy cousin was dressed to kill on her birthday.
fit like a glovefit perfectly (tight to one's body)Anita's prom dress fits me like a glove.
fine-tooth combin great detail, extremely carefullyThe police looked for fingerprints with a fine-tooth comb.
fly by the seat of one's pantsdo by instinct, not by planI had never taught art to kids before. I had to fly by the seat of my pants.
handle with kid glovestreat delicatelyPlease handle my grandmother's tea set with kid gloves.
hand-me-downused clothingWe buy hand-me-down skates because the kids' feet grow so quickly.
hat trickthree goals scored by one personThe fans cheered when the hockey player got a hat trick.
in one's birthday suitin the nudeThe swimmers in the lake were in their birthday suits.
keep one's shirt ontry to stay calmI know you're in a hurry, but please keep your shirt on.
keep something zippedkeep something a secretWe know we're having a boy, but we're keeping it zipped from the grandparents.
off the cuffsaid without planningI didn't have a speech prepared. Everything I said was off the cuff.
pull up one's sockstry harderMarco will have to pull up his socks if he wants to make the football team.
put a sock in itstop talkingPut a sock in it! I'm trying to tell a story.
put one's thinking cap onthink hard in order to solve a problemI can't remember where the Christmas decorations are. I'll have to put my thinking cap on.
put oneself in someone else's shoesimagine what it would be like to be in someone else's situationPut yourself in Amber's shoes. She doesn't even have a car to drive.
ride one's coattailslet someone else do all of the workIt was a group project, but everyone rode Andrew's coattails.
roll up one's sleevesget down to hard workThe celebrities rolled up their sleeves and washed cars for charity.
take one's hat off to someonerecognize or honour someone for somethingtake my hat off to Jim. The doctors said he'd never walk, and he just ran a marathon.
wear one's heart on one's sleevedisplay emotions openlyMy Dad's not afraid to cry. He always wears his heart on his sleeve.
wear the trousersbe in charge, make the rulesBy the looks of things, the kids wear the trousers in this household.

Nhận xét

Bài đăng phổ biến từ blog này

New year's Idioms

Death Idioms

Health Idioms