English Idioms: Strapped for cash
English Idioms About “Money”
Idiom: Strapped for cash
Meaning: The idiom strapped for cash to be short of money.
Example: I’m strapped for cash, can you lend me ten dollars?
English Idioms About “Money”
Idiom: Strapped for cash
Meaning: The idiom strapped for cash to be short of money.
Example: I’m strapped for cash, can you lend me ten dollars?
English Idioms About “Money”
Idiom: Licence to print money
Meaning: If a company or activity is a licence to print money, it generates a lot of money without much effort.
Example: Advertizing companies are just a licence to print money.
English Idioms About “Relationship”
Idiom: Go with the flow
Meaning: To do what people do and accept things as they are.
Example: Don’t worry too much! Take it easy and go with the flow!
English Idioms About “Animals”
Idiom: Take to something like a duck to water
Meaning: To have a natural ability to do something.
Example: She took to motherhood like a duck to water.
English Idioms About “General”
Idiom: Take it or leave it
Meaning: Said about an offer when you either accept it or reject it completely.
Example: This is my offer; take it or leave it.
English Idioms About “Names”
Idiom: Bob’s your uncle
Meaning: Said to mean “No problem”, “the solution is simple”, “there you have it” (appended to the end of a description of how to achieve something).
Example: You want to go to the stadium? Go straight on until you reach the park, take the first left and Bob’s your uncle!
English Idioms About “Clothes”
Idiom: Wait for the other shoe to drop
Meaning: To await a seemingly inevitable event, especially one which is not desirable.
Example: He was waiting for the other shoe to drop once some of his companions had been captured by the official authorities,