English Idioms: Weather permitting
English Idioms About “Weather”
Idiom: Weather permitting
Meaning: If the weather is fine.
Example: Weather permitting, we will be able to go on a picnic tomorrow.
English Idioms About “Weather”
Idiom: Weather permitting
Meaning: If the weather is fine.
Example: Weather permitting, we will be able to go on a picnic tomorrow.
English Idioms About “Furniture”
Idiom: On the table
Meaning: Being discussed or considered.
Example: Everybody agreed to leave the plan to build a new school in our town on the table.
English Idioms About “War”
Idiom: Shot in the dark
Meaning: The phrase refers to a hopeful attempt at something or a wild guess especially when you have no certain information or knowledge about the subject.
Example: It was just a shot in the dark, but I was right!
English Idioms About “Religion”
Idiom: Cold day in hell
Meaning: This idiom is used to mean that something will never happen.
Example: It’ll be a cold day in hell before I accept his apologies.
English Idioms About “Men and women”
Idiom: Every man jack
Meaning: The phrase every man jack means every person without exception.
Example: All the volunteers contributed their time towards cleaning up the city, every man jack of them.
English Idioms About “Travel”
Idiom: On the wagon
Meaning: To abstain from drinking any alcoholic drink, usually in the sense of having given it up
Example: No, thank you! No alcohol for me I am on the wagon.
English Idioms About “Religion”
Idiom: Go to hell in a handbasket
Meaning: Go to a bad state of affairs quickly.
Example: He said that all their plans for the project went to hell in a handbasket because of the recession.