English Idioms: Fall for someone
English Idioms About “Love”
Idiom: Fall for someone
Meaning: To fall in love with someone.
Example: He fell for her because she’s so beautiful.
English Idioms About “Love”
Idiom: Fall for someone
Meaning: To fall in love with someone.
Example: He fell for her because she’s so beautiful.
English Idioms About “Religion”
Idiom: Devil-may-care
Meaning: Careless, reckless or defiant.
Example: He has a rather devil-may-care attitude to his wife’s illness.
English Idioms About “Science”
Idiom: In tune (with somebody/something)
Meaning: Said when you have a good understanding of someone or something.
Example: He was in tune with new technologies.
English Idioms About “Work”
Idiom: A woman’s work is never done
Meaning: The proverb a woman’s work is never done means that a woman often works longer hours than a man because the housework and raising children are jobs that never end. The origin of the saying comes from an old rhymed couplet: Man may work from sun to sun, But woman’s work is never done.
Example: “A woman’s work is never done!”, said Leila. She added: “As soon as I finish washing the breakfast dishes, it’s time to start preparing lunch. Then I have to go shopping and when the kids are back home I have to help them with their homework.”
English Idioms About “Animals”
Idiom: Back the wrong horse
Meaning: To support someone or something that later cannot be successful.
Example: Don’t back the wrong horse! You know he cannot win the elections.
English Idioms About “Parts of the body”
Idiom: Skin and bones
Meaning: To be underweight and look bad, to be extremely thin.
Example: Because of her illness she was nothing but skin and bones.
English Idioms About “Clothes”
Idiom: Light skirt
Meaning: The phrase light skirt refers to a loose woman, a prostitute.
Example: Don’t call her a light skirt. She is a respectable woman.