English Idioms: Clean as a whistle
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 “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 “Relationship”
Idiom: Play a joke
Meaning: (Also play trick) to deceive someone for fun.
Example: On April fool’s day some people play practical jokes on their friends.
English Idioms About “Animals”
Idiom: Have kittens
Meaning: (Also have a cow) to be very worried, upset or angry about something.
Example: My father had kittens when I stayed out late yesterday.
English Idioms About “Parts of the body”
Idiom: Get in someone’s hair
Meaning: Annoy someone.
Example: I know that the children get in your hair, but you should try not to let it upset you so much.
English Idioms About “Food”
Idiom: Eye candy
Meaning: A very attractive person or persons or any object or sight with considerable visual appeal.
Example: 1. I’m going to the beach to check out some eye candy.2. The computer graphics added lots of eye candy to that movie.
English Idioms About “Men and women”
Idiom: Woman of ill repute
Meaning: The idiom a woman of ill repute refers to a prostitute.
Example: He started a new relationship with a woman of ill repute.
English Idioms About “General”
Idiom: Get off the track
Meaning: To start talking about a different topic, instead of talking about the real one.
Example: Instead of discussing the real reasons for their conflicts, they are getting of the track.