English Idioms: Love somebody to death
English Idioms About “Death”
Idiom: Love somebody to death
Meaning: To love somebody very much.
Example: He loves her to death.
English Idioms About “Death”
Idiom: Love somebody to death
Meaning: To love somebody very much.
Example: He loves her to death.
English Idioms About “Animals”
Idiom: See a man about a dog
Meaning: Used as an excuse for leaving without giving the real reason (especially if the reason is to go to the toilet, or to have a drink)
Example: Please, wait for me here. I won’t be long. I’m just going to see a man about a dog.
English Idioms About “General”
Idiom: Right down to
Meaning: Considering even minor things or people.
Example: We are all concerned with obeying the law, from the minister down to the common man.
English Idioms About “Food”
Idiom: All one’s eggs in one basket
Meaning: the state of having invested heavily in just one area or of having devoted all of one’s resources to one thing.
Example: The stock market decline wouldn’t have hurt him so badly if he hadn’t had all his eggs in one basket
English Idioms About “Parts of the body”
Idiom: To wash one’s hands of
Meaning: To absolve oneself of responsibility or future blame for.
Example: I wash my hands of this whole affair.
English Idioms About “Money”
Idiom: Minting money
Meaning: (Also minting money) Earning a lot of money quickly.
Example: Since the arrival of the new manager, the restaurant is minting money.
English Idioms About “Crime”
Idiom: Crime doesn’t pay
Meaning: This idiom is used to suggest that crime will ultimately not benefit a person.
Example: Doing something illegal to get money may be tempting for some, but in fact crime doesn’t pay.