English Idioms: Big bucks
English Idioms About “Money”
Idiom: Big bucks
Meaning: Lots of money.
Example: The new managing director must be making big bucks after his promotion.
English Idioms About “Money”
Idiom: Big bucks
Meaning: Lots of money.
Example: The new managing director must be making big bucks after his promotion.
English Idioms About “Home”
Idiom: The home stretch
Meaning: The last part of a difficult work.
Example: We are in the home stretch after a year of hard work.
English Idioms About “Parts of the body”
Idiom: Send shivers down someone’s spine
Meaning: To terrify; to make someone feel extremely nervous.
Example: Hearing that the killer escaped prison sent shivers down my spine.
English Idioms About “General”
Idiom: Big wheel
Meaning: A person with a great deal of power or influence, especially a high-ranking person in an organization.
Example: She’s a big wheel at IBM.
English Idioms About “Death”
Idiom: Another nail in one’s coffin
Meaning: One in a series of events which lead to downfall or inevitable failure.
Example: After the bankruptcy and the death of his only son, divorce is just another nail in his coffin.
English Idioms About “Money”
Idiom: Quote a price
Meaning: State in advance the price for…
Example: The mason quoted a price of 500$ to fix the roof of my house.
English Idioms About “Travel”
Idiom: Jump the lights
Meaning: To pass a set of traffic lights when they are not showing green.
Example: It’s dangerous to jump the lights. You may have a terrible accident.