Clothing Idioms
Clothing Idioms
| idiom | meaning | example sentence |
|---|---|---|
| at the drop of a hat | without needing any advance notice | My Grandma will babysit for anyone at the drop of a hat. |
| (have a) bee in one's bonnet | something that is annoying someone | Milan has had a bee in his bonnet all day, but he won't tell me what's wrong. |
| below the belt | beyond what is fair or socially acceptable | His comment about Manfred's handicap was below the belt. |
| bursting at the seams | not fitting anymore | I ate too much. I'm bursting at the seams in these jeans. |
| caught with one's pants down | unprepared | My students caught me with my pants down on Monday. I forgot about the field trip. |
| (have a) card up one's sleeve | have a secret or reserve plan | I think Josh has a card up his sleeve cause he wants me to wear a dress to the fast-food restaurant. |
| buckle down | work extra hard | It's almost exam time, so I need to buckle down this weekend. |
| burn a hole in one's pocket | money that one is tempted to spend | Let'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 nines | dress in nice or sexy clothes | My cousin was dressed to kill on her birthday. |
| fit like a glove | fit perfectly (tight to one's body) | Anita's prom dress fits me like a glove. |
| fine-tooth comb | in great detail, extremely carefully | The police looked for fingerprints with a fine-tooth comb. |
| fly by the seat of one's pants | do by instinct, not by plan | I had never taught art to kids before. I had to fly by the seat of my pants. |
| handle with kid gloves | treat delicately | Please handle my grandmother's tea set with kid gloves. |
| hand-me-down | used clothing | We buy hand-me-down skates because the kids' feet grow so quickly. |
| hat trick | three goals scored by one person | The fans cheered when the hockey player got a hat trick. |
| in one's birthday suit | in the nude | The swimmers in the lake were in their birthday suits. |
| keep one's shirt on | try to stay calm | I know you're in a hurry, but please keep your shirt on. |
| keep something zipped | keep something a secret | We know we're having a boy, but we're keeping it zipped from the grandparents. |
| off the cuff | said without planning | I didn't have a speech prepared. Everything I said was off the cuff. |
| pull up one's socks | try harder | Marco will have to pull up his socks if he wants to make the football team. |
| put a sock in it | stop talking | Put a sock in it! I'm trying to tell a story. |
| put one's thinking cap on | think hard in order to solve a problem | I can't remember where the Christmas decorations are. I'll have to put my thinking cap on. |
| put oneself in someone else's shoes | imagine what it would be like to be in someone else's situation | Put yourself in Amber's shoes. She doesn't even have a car to drive. |
| ride one's coattails | let someone else do all of the work | It was a group project, but everyone rode Andrew's coattails. |
| roll up one's sleeves | get down to hard work | The celebrities rolled up their sleeves and washed cars for charity. |
| take one's hat off to someone | recognize or honour someone for something | I take 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 sleeve | display emotions openly | My Dad's not afraid to cry. He always wears his heart on his sleeve. |
| wear the trousers | be in charge, make the rules | By the looks of things, the kids wear the trousers in this household. |
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