English Idioms: Take to something like a duck to water
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 “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 “Relationship”
Idiom: Bad blood
Meaning: Unpleasant feeling between different people.
Example: There is bad blood between Nancy and Leila. They are rarely in good terms with each other.
English Idioms About “Food”
Idiom: Chew the fat
Meaning: To waste time talking or to chat idly.
Example: As she had nothing to do, she wasted time chewing the fat with the neighbor.
English Idioms About “Law”
Idiom: Law of the jungle
Meaning: This expression means survival of the strongest or the fittest. The origin of the phrase can be traced back to “The Jungle Book” by Rudyard Kipling. He uses the term to describe an actual set of legal codes used by wolves and other animals in the jungles of India.
Example: Some economists think that capitalism is governed by the law of the jungle.
English Idioms About “Sport”
Idiom: Beats me
Meaning: (Aso it beats me) I don’t know; I have no idea.
Example: Mickeal: What’s the longest river in the world? Alan: Beats me!
English Idioms About “Names”
Idiom: Every Tom, Dick and Harry
Meaning: Said about something that is common knowledge to everybody.
Example: Every Tom, Dick and Harry knows what happened.
English Idioms About “Age”
Idiom: Of advanced age
Meaning: The phrase of advanced age or advanced years describes someone as old.
Example: The conference is about the effect of advanced age on fertility and pregnancy in women.