User talk:Mrvindu: Difference between revisions

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Bombshell
Bombshell
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Tart up
tart up
(To dress someone up or make something fancy in a tawdry, garish way: We tarted up the apartment with a pink shag carpet. The dancers tarted themselves up in feathers and sequins.)
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Chip off the Old Block
chip off the old block
(a person (usually a male) who behaves in the same way as his father or resembles his father. John looks like his father—a real chip off the old block. Bill Jones, Jr., is a chip off the old block. He's a banker just like his father.)
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Dont you bottle it
bottle it
(To lose one's nerve, courage, or resolve to undertake something. Primarily heard in UK. I wanted to ask Steve on a date, but I bottled it at the last minute.)
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hold the fort
(to take care of a place while someone who is usually there is gone, such as a store or one's home.)
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walk on eggshells
(1. to walk very carefully; to take steps gingerly. Since he stumbled and fell against the china cabinet, Bill has been walking on eggshells.
2.  to be very diplomatic and inoffensive. I was walking on eggshells trying to explain the remark to her without offending her further.)
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Revision as of 22:46, 12 February 2016

English Vocabulary, Verbal Phrases and Idioms


Diaspora


Pessimistic


Reel


Bombshell


tart up (To dress someone up or make something fancy in a tawdry, garish way: We tarted up the apartment with a pink shag carpet. The dancers tarted themselves up in feathers and sequins.)


chip off the old block (a person (usually a male) who behaves in the same way as his father or resembles his father. John looks like his father—a real chip off the old block. Bill Jones, Jr., is a chip off the old block. He's a banker just like his father.)


bottle it (To lose one's nerve, courage, or resolve to undertake something. Primarily heard in UK. I wanted to ask Steve on a date, but I bottled it at the last minute.)


hold the fort (to take care of a place while someone who is usually there is gone, such as a store or one's home.)


walk on eggshells (1. to walk very carefully; to take steps gingerly. Since he stumbled and fell against the china cabinet, Bill has been walking on eggshells. 2. to be very diplomatic and inoffensive. I was walking on eggshells trying to explain the remark to her without offending her further.) ---