English Idioms: Bring to the table
English Idioms About “Furniture”
Idiom: Bring to the table
Meaning: To bring something to the table means to contribute something to a group effort.
Example: It is all about you bring to the table.
English Idioms About “Furniture”
Idiom: Bring to the table
Meaning: To bring something to the table means to contribute something to a group effort.
Example: It is all about you bring to the table.
English Idioms About “Money”
Idiom: For love nor money
Meaning: Said when it is difficult to get something or persuade someone.
Example: You can’t get help for love nor money these days.
English Idioms About “Law”
Idiom: Read the riot act
Meaning: If you read the riot act to someone, you warn or reprimand them energetically or forcefully
Example: The principal read the riot act to the trouble makers
English Idioms About “Home”
Idiom: Make yourself at home
Meaning: If you say to someone make yourself at home, this means that you ask them to consider themselves as if they were in their own homes.
Example: Alan: Can I get in? John: Yes please, make yourself at home!
English Idioms About “Clothes”
Idiom: The men in grey suits
Meaning: The phrase the men in grey suits refers to the powerful and influential men in business or politics. A variation of this idiom is: the men in suits
Example: The men in grey suits will decide the future of this nation.
English Idioms About “Money”
Idiom: Turn up like a bad penny
Meaning: A person or thing which is unpleasant, disreputable, or otherwise unwanted, especially one which repeatedly appears at inopportune times.
Example: He always turns up like a bad penny.
English Idioms About “Relationship”
Idiom: The mother of all
Meaning: An extreme example which is the biggest, most impressive, or most important of its kind.
Example: Failure is the mother of all success.