English Idioms: At your mother’s knee
English Idioms About “Parts of the body”
Idiom: At your mother’s knee
Meaning: Said about something that you learned when you were a child.
Example: She learned to sing at her mother’s knee.
English Idioms About “Parts of the body”
Idiom: At your mother’s knee
Meaning: Said about something that you learned when you were a child.
Example: She learned to sing at her mother’s knee.
English Idioms About “Sport”
Idiom: Beats me
Meaning: (Aso it beats me) I don’t know; I have no idea.
Example: Mickeal: What’s the longest river in the world? Alan: Beats me!
English Idioms About “Home”
Idiom: Men make houses, women make homes
Meaning: It’s often the men who build or acquire houses for their families, but it’s usually women who provide the things that make a house into a home.
Example: When her husband bought the house, she took charge of decorating and tidying it up. It’s true that men make houses, women make homes.
English Idioms About “Science”
Idiom: On the same wavelength
Meaning: Thinking in the same pattern or in agreement.
Example: They’ve done a good job because they were on the same wavelength.
English Idioms About “Parts of the body”
Idiom: Wag one’s chin
Meaning: To talk.
Example: Stop wagging your chin and do something.
English Idioms About “Weather”
Idiom: Weather the storm
Meaning: To experience a very difficult situation and survive it.
Example: They lost everything they had, but somehow they weathered the storm.
English Idioms About “Time”
Idiom: High time
Meaning: If it’s high time you did something, it is the appropriate time for it.
Example: It’s high time you began learning how to drive.