English Idioms: Dad fetch my buttons
English Idioms About “Science”
Idiom: Dad fetch my buttons
Meaning: Said to express a surprise.
Example: Dad fetch my buttons! He won a lot of money in the lotery.
English Idioms About “Science”
Idiom: Dad fetch my buttons
Meaning: Said to express a surprise.
Example: Dad fetch my buttons! He won a lot of money in the lotery.
English Idioms About “Home”
Idiom: Go home in a box
Meaning: To die and be shipped home.
Example: Those soldiers are too young. It’s a pitty that they go home in a box.
English Idioms About “Health”
Idiom: Alive and kicking
Meaning: (Also be alive and well) to continue to be well, healthy or successful.
Example: 1. Don’t worry about your grandfather; he is alive and kicking.
English Idioms About “Animals”
Idiom: Spring chicken
Meaning: To be old; not young anymore.
Example: She is not a spring chicken. She wouldn’t like to go partying with us.
English Idioms About “General”
Idiom: To pull the trigger
Meaning: 1. To fire a gun. 2. To commit to a course of action.
Example: Some traders are too afraid to pull the trigger and just watch the market without ever getting involved.
English Idioms About “Life”
Idiom: Fact of life
Meaning: Something that cannot be avoided.
Example: It is a pity that drug abuse has become a fact of life in the Olympic Games.
English Idioms About “Life”
Idiom: A new lease of life
Meaning: This idiom is used to refer to an occasion when something gives you the chance to become happy or healthy and makes you more energetic than before.
Example: His new job has given him a new lease of life.