English Idioms: Traffic jam
English Idioms About “Food”
Idiom: Traffic jam
Meaning: A lot of vehicles causing slow traffic.
Example: We got stuck in a traffic jam for more than an hour.
English Idioms About “Food”
Idiom: Traffic jam
Meaning: A lot of vehicles causing slow traffic.
Example: We got stuck in a traffic jam for more than an hour.
English Idioms About “Men and women”
Idiom: Every man has his price
Meaning: The phrase every man has his price means that everyone can be bribed if you know how much or what to bribe him or her with.
Example: “I offered him ten thousand dollars to sign the agreement, but he refused.”Just keep trying! Give him more. You know, every man has his price!”
English Idioms About “General”
Idiom: Set the wheels in motion
Meaning: To initiate a chain of events necessary to help one achieve a goal (more quickly)
Example: His contribution to the project will surely set the wheels in motion.
English Idioms About “Numbers”
Idiom: Nine to five
Meaning: Said about a job with normal daytime hours, a job that begins at nine o’clock in the morning and finishes at five.
Example: She’s tired of working nine to five.
English Idioms About “General”
Idiom: Get off the track
Meaning: To start talking about a different topic, instead of talking about the real one.
Example: Instead of discussing the real reasons for their conflicts, they are getting of the track.
English Idioms About “Religion”
Idiom: In God’s name
Meaning: (Also in the name of God, in the name of heaven,in God’s name, in heaven’s name) used to add emphasis.
Example: What in God’s name did you do to that poor girl?
English Idioms About “Death”
Idiom: Love somebody to death
Meaning: To love somebody very much.
Example: He loves her to death.