English Idioms: Blow a fuse
English Idioms About “Science”
Idiom: Blow a fuse
Meaning: Become uncontrolably angry; lose your temper.
Example: Hey, don’t blow a fuse.
English Idioms About “Science”
Idiom: Blow a fuse
Meaning: Become uncontrolably angry; lose your temper.
Example: Hey, don’t blow a fuse.
English Idioms About “Love”
Idiom: Misery loves company
Meaning: The phrase misery loves company means that if someone is miserable, they like others to be miserable too so that they can feel better about themselves.
Example: I see that you got into a lot of trouble, but since your colleague is in trouble too, that makes you feel better. Misery loves company, doesn’t it?
English Idioms About “Animals”
Idiom: A little bird told me
Meaning: Said when you don’t want reveal the source of your information.
Example: “How did you know the news?”
English Idioms About “Food”
Idiom: All one’s eggs in one basket
Meaning: the state of having invested heavily in just one area or of having devoted all of one’s resources to one thing.
Example: The stock market decline wouldn’t have hurt him so badly if he hadn’t had all his eggs in one basket
English Idioms About “General”
Idiom: Next to nothing
Meaning: Almost; hardly.
Example: Although they paid him next to nothing, he liked the job.
English Idioms About “Weather”
Idiom: Chase rainbows
Meaning: This idiom is used when someone tries to pursue unrealistic or fanciful goals, things that are impossible.
Example: He thought he could convince the boss to appoint him as the new manager, but in fact he was chasing rainbows.
English Idioms About “Men and women”
Idiom: As one man
Meaning: If a group of people do something as one man, they do it unanimously, in complete agreement.
Example: They all rose as one man, supporting the poor family.