English Idioms: Don’t get me wrong
English Idioms About “Relationship”
Idiom: Don’t get me wrong
Meaning: An expression said when you fear someone does not understand what you say.
Example: Don’t get me wrong but I think your plan may not work.
English Idioms About “Relationship”
Idiom: Don’t get me wrong
Meaning: An expression said when you fear someone does not understand what you say.
Example: Don’t get me wrong but I think your plan may not work.
English Idioms About “Food”
Idiom: Food for thought
Meaning: Information or knowledge that is worthy of contemplation.
Example: The ideas developed in this book have certainly given me food for thought.
English Idioms About “Colors”
Idiom: Born to the purple
Meaning: If someone is born to the purple or in the purple, they are born into a reigning family or privileged class.
Example: She was the only child born to the purple.
English Idioms About “Life”
Idiom: Take someone’s life
Meaning: To kill someone.
Example: The floods took hundreds of lives.
English Idioms About “Names”
Idiom: In name only
Meaning: (Also, only in name) The phrase in name only means nominally, not essentially.
Example: They were married only in name; the fact is that they lived in different countries.
English Idioms About “Weather”
Idiom: Have a face like thunder
Meaning: This idiom is used to describe a person who is angry or upset about something.
Example: She had a face like thunder when she discovered the truth.
English Idioms About “Age”
Idiom: Age before beauty
Meaning: A phrase said to allow older people to go before younger ones. Now most often used humorously or lightheartedly, and usually said by a younger person to an older friend or relative out of mock pity for being so much older and unattractive.
Example: Please, you first. Age before beauty, you know.