English Idioms: Apple of somebody’s eye
English Idioms About “Food”
Idiom: Apple of somebody’s eye
Meaning: Said about someone whom you love the most and you are very proud of.
Example: His son is the apple of his eye.
English Idioms About “Food”
Idiom: Apple of somebody’s eye
Meaning: Said about someone whom you love the most and you are very proud of.
Example: His son is the apple of his eye.
English Idioms About “Age”
Idiom: Of age
Meaning: Old enough to be considered an adult.
Example: He’s of age now, he can buy his own car.
English Idioms About “Music”
Idiom: Clean as a whistle
Meaning: If someone is as clean as a whistle they are perfectly clean.
Example: She’s clean as a whistle.
English Idioms About “Parts of the body”
Idiom: Get something off your chest
Meaning: To reveal something that is worrying you or making you feel guilty in order to feel relieved.
Example: She felt relieved when she got it off her chest. She had felt guilty for years.
English Idioms About “Love”
Idiom: Make love, not war
Meaning: A hippie anti-war slogan encouraging love and peace.
Example: Why don’t you stop fighting! Make love not war!
English Idioms About “Money”
Idiom: Drop a dime
Meaning: To drop a dime means to make a phone call, usually calling the police to inform on or betray someone.
Example: He went out to drop a dime on John.
English Idioms About “Food”
Idiom: In a nutsheel
Meaning: In summary.
Example: The truth in a nutshell is that I know nothing about what they want me to do in this job.