English Idioms: For love nor money
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 “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 “Work”
Idiom: Cold piece of work
Meaning: If someone is a cold piece of work they are difficult to deal with.
Example: Did you see how she treats her husband? She is a cold piece of work.
English Idioms About “Clothes”
Idiom: All hat and no cattle
Meaning: Describing someone who is full of big talk but lacking action, power, or substance; pretentious.
Example: We expect our president to be effective in his job, not a person who is all hat and no cattle.
English Idioms About “Sport”
Idiom: Throw in the towel
Meaning: (Also throw in the sponge) to admit defeat.
Example: After a long fight agaisnt his enemies, he finally threw the towel.
English Idioms About “Money”
Idiom: Bank on
Meaning: To expect something or rely on.
Example: Can I bank on your friend’s predictions about the stock market?
English Idioms About “Home”
Idiom: Home free
Meaning: To be certain of being successful because you have finished the most difficult part.
Example: Once you hand in the last part of your dissertation, you’re home free.
English Idioms About “Health”
Idiom: White as a sheet
Meaning: (Also as white as a sheet) said about someone whose face is very pale because of illness, shock or fear.
Example: Joe looks as white as sheet. He must be very ill.