Solved Idioms in CSS Examination 1971-2010
Solved Idioms in CSS Examination 1971-2010
1971
1- Carry out
2- Taken over
3- Bring about
cause
She hopes to bring about a change in his attitude.
4- Beat out
Beat out of
Cheat someone of something
He was always trying to beat the conductor out of the full train fare.
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5- Bear with
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1972
2- To fall through
Fail, miscarry
The proposed amendment fell through.
I hope our plans won't fall through. [Late 1700s]
3- On right earnest Although with no contacts with many countries in Asia ISAO had a stupendous task of reaching
out to these realities and networking with them, and it took up the mission in right earnest.
4- Vested interests
5- Meaningful dialogue
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1973
1- Turn to account
5- To keep open house To have one's house in a state or condition in which visitors or
guests are welcome at any time.
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Another form of this idiom is have a finger in every pie
1974
1- When all is said and done / After all is said and done
2- An axe to grind
This frequently used idiom comes from a story by Charles Miner, published in 1811, about a boy
who was flattered into turning the grindstone for a man sharpening his axe. He worked hard until
the school bell rang, whereupon the man, instead of thanking the boy, began to scold him for
being late and told him to hurry to school.
"Having an axe to grind" then came into figurative use for having a personal motive for some
action. [Mid-1800s]
Make a fresh start, change one's conduct or attitude for the better
He promised the teacher he would turn over a new leaf and behave himself in class.
This expression alludes to turning the page of a book to a new page. [Early 1500s]
This metaphor originated in France and was translated into English in Randle Cotgrave's
Dictionary (1611), where it referred to dissipating one's wealth. It soon acquired its present
broader meaning.
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5- Leave in the lurch
If something is a red rag to a bull, it is something that will inevitably make somebody angry or
cross.
10- The writing on the wall / handwriting on the wall clear signs that a situation is going to become very difficult
This expression comes from the Bible (Daniel 5:5-31), in which the prophet interprets some
mysterious writing that a disembodied hand has inscribed on the palace wall, telling King
Belshazzar that he will be overthrown
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1975
If someone exaggerates a problem or makes a small problem seem far greater than it really is,
then they are making a storm in a teacup
This term, with its image of putting out a fire with water, at one time meant “defame” or
“slander”; the modern meaning dates from about 1800.
This expression may come from a folk tale involving these two animals, or from the name of an
English inn where travellers told such tales.
W.S. Gilbert used it in The Yeomen of the Guard (1888), where Jack Point and Wilfred the Jailer
make up a story about the hero's fictitious death: "Tell a tale of cock and bull, of convincing
detail full." [c. 1600]
7- Tied to apron-strings of
This expression, dating from the early 1800s, probably alluded to apron-string tenure, a 17th-
century law that allowed a husband to control his wife's and her family's property during her
lifetime.
Rely on one's past achievements, especially as a way of avoiding the work needed to advance
one's status.
Now that Julian's in his eighties, he's decided to rest on his laurels and let some of the younger
agents do the work.
This term alludes to the crown of laurels awarded in ancient times for a spectacular achievement.
[Late 1800s]
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1976
1- Trudge along to make very slow progress, especially with difficult or boring work
2- Point-blank
3- In the doldrums
5- At cross purposes
When people are at cross purposes, they misunderstand each other or have different or opposing
objectives
With aims or goals that conflict or interfere with one another
I'm afraid the two departments are working at cross purposes.
This idiom, first recorded in 1688, may have begun as a 17th-century parlor game called “cross-
purposes,” in which a series of subjects (or questions) were divided from their explanations (or
answers) and distributed around the room. Players then created absurdities by combining a
subject taken from one person with an explanation taken from another.
6- Check by jowl
7- Succinctly
9- Plain sailing
Alluding to navigating waters free of hazards, such as rocks or other obstructions, this term was
transferred to other activities in the early 1800s.
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1977
This idiom uses brunt in the sense of "the main force of an enemy's attack", which was sustained
by the front lines of the defenders. [Second half of 1700s]
A person who calls a spade a spade is one speaks frankly and makes little or no attempt to
conceal their opinions or to spare the feelings of their audience.
3- To fight shy of
This usage may allude to a military reluctance to meet or engage with the enemy. [Late 1700s]
This idiom means that getting upset after something has gone wrong is pointless; it can't be
changed so it should be accepted.
Someone who burns the candle at both ends lives life at a hectic pace, doing things which are
likely to affect their health badly.
Exhaust one's energies or resources by leading a hectic life.
Joseph's been burning the candle at both ends for weeks, working two jobs during the week and a
third on weekends.
This metaphor originated in France and was translated into English in Randle Cotgrave's
Dictionary (1611), where it referred to dissipating one's wealth. It soon acquired its present
broader meaning.
If you rob Peter to pay Paul, you try to solve one problem,
but create another in doing so, often through short-term planning
If someone plays to the gallery, they say or do things that will make them popular at the expense
of more important issues
If you hold out or offer an olive branch, you make a gesture to indicate that you want peace.
Understand
I can't make out what she is trying to say. [Mid-1600s]
Establish or prove
He made out that he was innocent. [Colloquial; mid-1600s]
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1978
An acid test is something that proves whether something is good, effective, etc, or no
3- In a blue funk
This term originated in the mid-1700s as in a funk, the adjective blue, meaning "affected with
fear or anxiety", being added a century later.
This usage employs blue in the sense of "sad"—a meaning that first emerged in the late 1300s.
Literal use
Jean's dog was always at her heels.
Figurative use
Although his company dominated the technology, he always felt that his competitors were on his
heels.
This idiom appeared in the 14th-century romance Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.
The expression is sometimes intensified as hard on someone's heels or hot on someone's heels
5- To die in harness
Both phrases probably allude to soldiers who died on active duty. Until the early 1600s the noun
boot denoted a piece of armor for the legs, which may have given rise to this usage.
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Shakespeare used harness in the sense of armor when he wrote: "At least we'll die with harness
on our back" (Macbeth 5:5).
The first, oldest, and most common of these similes, all of which can be applied literally to
persons or, more often today, to issues, involves doornail, dating from about 1350.
Its meaning is disputed but most likely it referred to the costly metal nails hammered into the
outer doors of the wealthy (most people used the much cheaper wooden pegs), which were
clinched on the inside of the door and therefore were "dead", that is, could not be used again.
Dead as a herring dates from the 16th century and no doubt alludes to the bad smell this dead
fish gives off, making its death quite obvious.
Dead as a dodo, referring to the extinct bird, dates from the early 1900s.
8- To strike one's colours meaning lowering the flag (the "colors") that signifies a ship's or garrison's allegiance —
a universally recognized indication of surrender, particularly for ships at sea.
9. To carry the day
Win, prevail
At auctions the wealthiest bidders usually carry the day. [Late 1600s]
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1979
If someone is taken down a peg (or taken down a peg or two), they lose status in the eyes of
others because of something they have done wrong or badly.
3- In hot water
in trouble
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5- To pull oneself together
Originally this term was used for an officer who had worked his way up from the rank of private,
a rare feat. It was being applied to non-military advances by the mid-1800s
7- To rub shoulders
If you rub shoulders with people, you meet and spend time with them, especially when they are
powerful or famous.
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1980
b) Bring out the meaning of any five of the following in appropriate sentences:
insult
1- Pocket the affront Swallow an insult without resentment
The thin end of the wedge is something small and seemingly unimportant that will lead to
something much bigger and more serious.
If something is a flash in the pan, it is very noticeable but doesn't last long, like most singers,
who are very successful for a while, then forgotten
4- To keep at
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Keep at someone
A person who does things in an unconventional manner, especially if their methods are not
generally approved of, is said to go against the grain. Such an individual can be called a
maverick.
7- Bring grist to the mill "everything can be made useful, or be a source of profit
Something that you can use to your advantage is grist for the mill.
('Grist to the mill' is also used.
8- Upset the apple cart
This expression started out as upset the cart, used since Roman times to mean "spoil everything".
The precise idiom dates from the late 1700s.
If you are hoist with your own petard, you get into trouble or caught in a trap that you had set
for someone else.
This expression alludes to fat in the sense of "the best or richest part".
The Bible has it as eat the fat of the land (Genesis 45:18).
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1981
If someone wants to have their cake and eat it too, they want everything their way, especially
when their wishes are contradictory.
If you are caught between the devil and the deep blue sea, you are in a dilemma; a difficult
choice.
3- To be in hot water
This proverbial expression, first recorded in 1614, is a shortening of the older form, "An inch of
a miss is as good [or bad] as a mile of a miss."
This expression is believed to have originated as a translation of the French le courage de son
opinion ("the courage of his opinion"), dating from the mid-1800s and at first so used. By the
late 1800s it had changed to the present form.
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9- The onlooker sees most of the game
It is used to suggest that someone will not think or worry about something if it isn't directly
visible or available to them
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1982
This metaphoric term is a shortening of Every cloud has a silver lining, in turn derived from John
Milton's Comus (1634): "A sable cloud turns forth its silver lining on the night."
This expression comes from Aesop's fable (c. 570 B.C.) about a man eating with a satyr on a
winter day. At first the man blew on his hands to warm them and then blew on his soup to cool
it. The satyr thereupon renounced the man's friendship because he blew hot and cold out of the
same mouth.
The expression was repeated by many writers, most often signifying a person who could not be
relied on.
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William Chillingworth put it: "These men can blow hot and cold out of the same mouth to serve
several purposes”"(The Religion of Protestants, 1638).
If you accidentally reveal a secret, you let the cat out of the bag, Give away a secret
Mom let the cat out of the bag and told us Karen was engaged.
This expression alludes to the dishonest practice of a merchant substituting a worthless cat for a
valuable pig, which is discovered only when the buyer gets home and opens the bag. [Mid-
1700s]
This expression has been used since antiquity but was first recorded in English in 1520.
If people are in the same boat, they are in the same predicament or trouble.
8- A Swan Song
This term alludes to the old belief that swans normally are mute but burst into beautiful song
moments before they die. Although the idea is much older, the term was first recorded in English
only in 1890
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1984
This term, generally expressed as a cautionary proverb (Don't look a gift horse in the mouth), has
been traced to the writings of the 4th-century cleric, St. Jerome, and has appeared in English
since about 1500. It alludes to determining the age of a horse by looking at its teeth
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If you have an axe to grind with someone or about something, you have a grievance, resentment
and you want to get revenge or sort it out. In American English, it is 'ax'
c) To wash one’s dirty linen in public / air one's dirty linen or laundry
These metaphors are reworking of a French proverb, IL fault laver son linge sale en famille
(“One should wash one's dirty linen at home”), which was quoted by Napoleon on his return
from Elba (1815). It was first recorded in English in 1867.
d) To pocket an insult
Run away
When the burglar alarm went off they took to their heels.
This expression alludes to the fact that the heels are all one sees of a fugitive running away fast.
Although similar expressions turned up from Shakespeare's time on, the exact idiom dates only
from the first half of the 1800s
f) To win laurels
g) A gentleman at large
Elected to represent an entire group of voters rather than those in a particular district or other
segment
Alderman at large, representing all the wards of a city instead of just one, or delegate at large to a
labor union convention. [Mid-1700s]
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1985
a) By and by
The expression probably relies on the meaning of by as a succession of quantities (as in "two by
two"). This adverbial phrase came to be used as a noun, denoting either procrastination or the
future.
William Camden so used it for the former (Remains, 1605): "Two anons and a by and by is an
hour and a half." And W.S. Gilbert used it in the latter sense when Lady Jane sings plaintively
that little will be left of her "in the coming by and by," that is, as she grows old (Patience, 1881).
[Early 1500s]
This expression alludes to Aesop's fable about a lion, who got all of a kill because its fellow
hunters, an ass, fox, and wolf, were afraid to claim their share.
When it is very clear who or what is right and wrong, then the situation is black and white.
d) To bring to book
This term uses book in the sense of "a written record," such as an account book or ledger. [c.
1800]
This term comes from cryptography, where in one code reading every second line of a message
gives a different meaning from that of the entire text. [Mid-1800s]
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f) To stick to one's guns
This expression, originally put as stand to one's guns, alluded to a gunner remaining by his post.
Its figurative use dates from the mid-1800s.
g) To be under a cloud
If someone is suspected of having done something wrong, they are under a cloud.
This expression began in the late 1500s as by fits, the noun fit meaning a "paroxysm" or
"seizure"; starts was added about a century later.
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1987
Move or retreat backwards without turning, withdraw from a situation, or break an agreement
or engagement.
After the announcement appeared in the papers, Mary found it doubly difficult to back out of her
engagement to Todd. [Early 1800s]
2- To keep out of
3- Bang into
The literal usage dates from the mid-1500s, the figurative from the second half of the 1800s.
4- To smell a rat
If you smell a rat, you know instinctively that something is wrong or that someone is lying to you.
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5- To burn one's fingers
Harm oneself
I'm staying away from risky stocks; I've burned my fingers often enough.
Some believe this expression came from a legend about a monkey who gets a cat to pull its
chestnuts out of the fire (see cat's paw); others hold it is from an English proverb:
"Burn not thy fingers to snuff another's candle" (James Howell, English Proverbs, 1659)
Cancelled, invalid
The lease is now null and void.
This phrase is actually redundant, since null means "void," that is, "ineffective." It was first
recorded in 1669.
7- To catch up with
catch up with
literal:
You run so fast it's hard to catch up with you.
figurative:
The auditors finally caught up with the embezzler. [Mid-1800s]
catch up on or with
8- To stand up for
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Fail to keep a date or appointment with
Al stood her up twice in the past week, and that will be the end of their relationship. [Colloquial;
c. 1900]
9- To skim through
1988
a) As cool as a cucumber
If someone wants to have their cake and eat it too, they want everything their way, especially
when their wishes are contradictory
c) In a Pickle
d) Take a cake
Be the most outstanding in some respect, either the best or the worst.
That advertising slogan really took the cake.
What a mess they made of the concert—that takes the cake!
This expression alludes to a contest called a cakewalk, in which a cake is the prize. Its figurative
use, for something either excellent or outrageously bad, dates from the 1880s.
If something is selling like hotcakes, it is very popular and selling very well.
f) As flat as a Pancake
It is so flat that it is like a pancake- there is no head on that beer it is as flat as a pancake.
If you should take something with a grain of salt, you shouldn't necessarily believe it all.
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h) Like two peas in a pod
Things that are like two peas in a pod are very similar or identical.
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1989
a) Account for
Explain or justify
Jane was upset because her son couldn't account for the three hours between his last class and his
arrival at home.
Both of these related usages are derived from the literal meaning of the phrase, that is, "make a
reckoning of an account." [Second half of 1700s]
d) To be taken aback
Surprise, shock
He was taken aback by her caustic remark.
This idiom comes from nautical terminology of the mid-1700s, when be taken aback referred to
the stalling of a ship caused by a wind shift that made the sails lay back against the masts. Its
figurative use was first recorded in 1829.
A wild goose chase is a waste of time- time spent trying to do something unsuccessfully.
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f) By leaps and bounds
This term is a redundancy, since leap and bound both mean "spring" or "jump," but the two
words have been paired since Shakespeare's time and are still so used
g) As cool as a cucumber
1990
a) White elephant
A white elephant is an expensive burden; something that costs far too much money to run, like
the Millennium Dome in the UK.
b) Blue Blood
e) In good books
If someone is in your good books, you are pleased with or think highly of them at the moment.
If you are caught between the devil and the deep blue sea, you are in a dilemma; a difficult
choice.
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g) Stare in the face / look in the face
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1991
i) Damocles' sword
Impending disaster
The likelihood of lay-offs has been a sword of Damocles over the department for months.
This expression alludes to the legend of Damocles, a servile courtier to King Dionysius I of
Syracuse. The king, weary of Damocles' obsequious flattery, invited him to a banquet and seated
him under a sword hung by a single hair, so as to point out to him the precariousness of his
position.
The idiom was first recorded in 1747. The same story gave rise to the expression hang by a
thread.
Completely, wholly
He was every inch a leader.
I had to argue this case every inch of the way.
This term comes from a Greek saying, call a bowl a bowl, that was mistranslated into Latin by
Erasmus and came into English in the 1500s.
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iv) On the sky
v) Palm off
This expression alludes to concealing something in the palm of one's hand. It replaced the earlier
palm on in the early 1800s.
When people pay lip service to something, they express their respect, but they don't act on their
words, so the respect is hollow and empty.
One who goes to work / fight / play for the opposing side, traitor
This idiom originally referred to a form of 16th-century horse racing requiring riders to follow a
leader in a particular formation (presumably resembling a flock of geese in flight). Its figurative
use dates from about 1600.
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1992
If you are caught between the devil and the deep blue sea, you are in a dilemma; a difficult
choice
iii) Over head and ears beyond one's depth; completely; wholly; hopelessly; as, over head and ears in
debt.
iv) Time and tide
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This proverbial phrase, alluding to the fact that human events or concerns cannot stop the
passage of time or the movement of the tides, first appeared about 1395 in Chaucer's Prologue to
the Clerk's Tale.
The alliterative beginning, time and tide, was repeated in various contexts over the years but
today survives only in the proverb, which is often shortened (as above).
If someone doesn't say clearly what they mean and try to make it hard to understand, they are
beating about (around) the bush.
This term, first recorded in 1568, expresses the even older notion that fish bite more readily
when seas are rough.
If you have a bird's eye view of something, you can see it perfectly clearly.
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1993
a) Play truant
b) Play down
Play down to
c) Turn turtle
This expression alludes to the helplessness of a turtle turned on its back, where its shell can no
longer protect it. [First half of 1800s]
This expression alludes to passing around the corner in a race, particularly the last corner. [First
half of 1800s]
A fair-weather friend is the type who is always there when times are good but forgets about you
when things get difficult or problems crop up.
f) Under a cloud
If someone is suspected of having done something wrong, they are under a cloud.
Both versions of this idiom allude to ancient military tactics, when troops would cross a body of
water and then burn the bridge or boats they had used both to prevent retreat and to foil a
pursuing enemy. [Late 1800s
h) Horse-trading
This expression alludes to the notorious shrewdness of horse traders, who literally bought and
sold horses. [c. 1820]
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1994
This expression alludes to Thomas Hobson of Cambridge, England, who rented horses and
allowed each customer to take only the horse nearest the stable door. [Mid-1600s]
(iii) Sting in the tail an unexpected, typically unpleasant or problematic end to something.
"the Budget comes with a sting in the tail—future tax increases"
(iv) With open arms
Enthusiastically, warmly
They received their new daughter-in-law with open arms.
This expression alludes to Pontius Pilate's washing his hands before having Jesus put to death,
saying "I am innocent of the blood of this just person" (Matthew 27:24).
This expression comes from Aesop's fable about a milkmaid carrying a full pail on her head. She
daydreams about buying chickens with the milk's proceeds and becoming so rich from selling
eggs that she will toss her head at suitors; she then tosses her head and spills the milk.
Widely translated from the original Greek, the story was the source of a proverb and was used
figuratively by the 16th century. Today it is still so well known that it often appears shortened
and usually in negative cautionary form (don't count your chickens).
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(vii) Burn midnight oil (To)
1996
1- Bear out
Back up or confirm
The results bear out what he predicted.
His story bears me out exactly. [Late 1400s]
3- Carry over
We'll carry over this summer's bathing suits for next winter's resort season.
4- Come off
Happen, occur
The trip came off on schedule. [Early 1800s]
5- Fall back
6- Figure out
Discover or determine
Let's figure out a way to help. [Early 1900s]
Solve or decipher
Can you figure out this puzzle? [Early 1800s]
8- Set in
Insert, put in
I still have to set in the sleeves and then the sweater will be done. [Late 1300s]
9- Cover up
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John and Mary finally ironed out their differences.
This expression uses ironing wrinkled fabric as a metaphor for smoothing differences. [Mid-
1800s]
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1997
These phrases call up a vivid image of someone flailing away at nothing. [Late 1300s]
b) To beggar description
This term, alluding to the idea that words are insufficient to do something justice, was already
used by Shakespeare in Antony and Cleopatra (2:2):
"For her own person It beggared all description."
c) To bring to mind
Cause to be remembered
The film brought to mind the first time I ever climbed a mountain.
This idiom, first recorded in 1433, appears in Robert Burns's familiar "Auld Lang Syne" (1788),
in which the poet asks if old times should never be brought to mind.
Both usages employ cap in the sense of “topping” something. [First half of 1800s]
In acient Rome thousands of years ago, people clipped the wings of pet birds so that they
couldn't fly away. For centuries people have used the idiom "Clip one's wings" to mean brings a
person under control.
This phrase alludes to Julius Caesar's crossing the Rubicon River (between Italy and Gaul) in 49
B.C., thereby starting a war against Pompey and the Roman Senate. Recounted in Plutarch's
Lives: Julius Caesar (c. A.D. 110), the crossing gave rise to the figurative English usage by the
early 1600s.
In life we should all learn from the mistakes that we have made and try not to repeat them. We
should not let sorrow overcome us and stand in our way. Learn to overcome hardships in life is
all what life is worth living about. After all that's the definition of life. Hence the saying "rise like
a phoenix from the ashes"
Phoenix is supposed to be a mythological bird of fire that is believed to die in flames and turn to
ash. But then it comes back to life from the same ash.
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1998
This expression alludes to the military sense of last ditch, "the last line of defence." Its figurative
use dates from the early 1800s.
2- A square meal
3- Go public
Become a publicly held company, that is, issue ownership shares in the form of stock.
As soon as the company grows a little bigger and begins to show a profit, we intend to go public.
[Mid-1900s]
Amok comes from a Malay word for "frenzied" and was adopted into English, and at first spelled
amuck, in the second half of the 1600s.
Run riot dates from the early 1500s and derives from an earlier sense, that is, a hound's following
an animal scent. Run wild alludes to an animal reverting to its natural, uncultivated state; its
figurative use dates from the late 1700s.
Men who play poker and smoke in a room at the back of the store
When the police raided Gino's they arrested four of the backroom boys.
The person who foots the bill pays the bill for everybody, settle the accounts
The bride's father was resigned to footing the bill for the wedding.
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This expression uses foot in the sense of "add up and put the total at the foot, or bottom, of an
account." [Colloquial; early 1800s]
This expression comes from racing, where it is said of a horse that passes the others and leads the
field. It was transferred to other activities in the early 1900s.
8- At times
Occasionally, sometimes
Away from home for the first time, Mary was homesick at times. [Early 1500s]
This idiom alludes to unexpectedly outshining the rest of the cast in a theatrical production. [First
half of 1900s]
1999
The phrase "Jaundiced eye" means to looks at something with a prejudiced view, usually in a
rather negative or critical manner.
This expression uses left-handed in the sense of "questionable or doubtful," a usage dating from
about 1600.
An interest or concern that occupies a large part of someone's time and effort
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(d) Tower of strength
This expression alludes to the age-old notion that persons with a healed broken bone or with
arthritis experience bone pain before rain, due to a drop in barometric pressure, and therefore can
predict a weather change.
This expression alludes to the suspended balance scale where an object is placed in one pan and
weights are added one by one to the other pan until the two are balanced.
(i) Close-fisted
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2000
To go to bed to sleep
The tip of the iceberg is the part of a problem that can be seen, with far more serious problems
lying underneath
This term employs par in the sense of "an average amount or quality," a usage dating from the
late 1700s.
If something is going from pillar to post, it is moving around in a meaningless way, from one
disaster to another.
Suspend on a hook or hanger, as in Let me hang up your coat for you. [c. 1300]
Replace a telephone receiver in its cradle; end a phone conversation
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She hung up the phone
He hung up on her. [Early 1900s]
Obsessed with
For years the FBI was hung up on Communist spies. [First half of 1900s]
Quit, retire
He's hanging up his sword next year and moving to Florida.
The noun in these expressions refers to the profession one is leaving—sword for the military,
gloves for boxing, and fiddle for music—but they all are used quite loosely as well, as in the
example.
(ix) Turn some one off Turn someone in: Hand someone over to the
authorities. 'The girl's family turned him in to
To create feelings of dislike, repulsion, disgust etc immigration authorities and she was deported.
(x) By and by
The expression probably relies on the meaning of by as a succession of quantities (as in "two by
two").
This adverbial phrase came to be used as a noun, denoting either procrastination or the future.
William Camden so used it for the former (Remains, 1605):
"Two anons and a by and by is an hour and a half."
And W.S. Gilbert used it in the latter sense when Lady Jane sings plaintively that little will be
left of her "in the coming by and by," that is, as she grows old (Patience, 1881). [Early 1500s]
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__________________________
2001
If you read between the lines, you find the real message in what you're reading or hearing, a
meaning that is not available from a literal interpretation of the words.
If people are at daggers drawn, they are very angry and close to violence.
This expression alludes to the medieval practice of a knight throwing down his gauntlet, or metal
glove, as a challenge to combat.
Its figurative use dates from the second half of the 1700s, as does the less frequently heard take
up the gauntlet, for accepting a challenge.
It is beyond my comprehension
This new computer program is all Greek to me.
This expression was coined by Shakespeare, who used it literally in Julius Caesar (1:2), where
Casca says of a speech by Seneca, deliberately given in Greek so that some would not
understand it:
"For mine own part, it was Greek to me."
It soon was transferred to anything unintelligible.
If you hear something from the horse's mouth, you hear it directly from the person concerned or
responsible.
To handle a difficult responsibility or burden on one's own.
(x) To carry the cross It's not an ideal situation, but we all have to carry our crosses.
__________________________
2002
Make sentences with the given Idiomatic phrases so that their meaning become clear: (10)
Surprise, shock
He was taken aback by her caustic remark.
This idiom comes from nautical terminology of the mid-1700s, when be taken aback referred to
the stalling of a ship caused by a wind shift that made the sails lay back against the masts. Its
figurative use was first recorded in 1829.
Become ill
It's just my luck to get sick on vacation.
When was she taken ill? [Ninth century]
Become disgusted
We got sick as we learned how much money was wasted.
I get sick when I hear about his debts. [Early 1500s]
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(5) take off
Remove
Take off your coat and stay for a while.
I took my foot off the brake. [c. 1300]
Deduct, decrease
He took 20 percent off the original price.
I want you to trim my hair, but please don't take off too much. [c. 1700]
Leave, go away
I'm taking off now.
We take ourselves off for China next month
as an imperative
Take yourself off right now! [First half of 1800s]
Rise in flight
The air plane took off on time. [Mid-1800s]
Discontinue
The rail road took off the commuter special. [Mid-1700s]
Withhold service
I'm taking off from work today because of the funeral. [First half of 1900s]
To consider mistakenly
Don't take silence for approval.
(8) take in
To include or constitute.
To understand
Couldn't take in the meaning of the word.
To deceive or swindle
was taken in by a confidence artist.
This term, dating from the mid-1700s, at first meant either assigning or challenging someone to a
task. Its current sense dates from the late 1800s.
Run away
When the burglar alarm went off they took to their heels.
This expression alludes to the fact that the heels are all one sees of a fugitive running away fast.
Although similar expressions turned up from Shakespeare's time on, the exact idiom dates only
from the first half of the 1800s
This expression is a translation of the Latin cum grano salis, which Pliny used in describing
Pompey's discovery of an antidote for poison (to be taken with a grain of salt). It was soon
adopted by English writers.
__________________________
2003
To die
When someone puts their foot down, they make a firm stand and establish their authority on an
issue.
This metaphoric term alludes to water going down a drain and being carried off.
(6) All cars "calling all cars" is a reference to calling for all the help you can get. When police departments
needed help, especially a small police department, they would make a call over the radio for all
cars. A desperate plea for help.
(7) Swan song
If things or people are cheek by jowl, they are very close together.
(9) in a nutshell
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Concisely, in a few words
Here's our proposal—in a nutshell, we want to sell the business to you.
This hyperbolic expression alludes to the Roman writer Pliny's description of Homer's Iliad
being copied in so tiny a hand that it could fit in a nutshell.
For a time it referred to anything compressed, but from the 1500s on it referred mainly to written
or spoken words.
If someone says this, they want to hit your open hand against theirs as a way of congratulation
or greeting.
__________________________
2004
Something that you can use to your advantage is grist for the mill.
In the 1700s this term, which may have alluded to donning one's best headgear, was applied to
members of either sex, but by the early 1800s it generally described a woman chasing a man. It is
probably obsolescent.
People say that life is not all beer and skittles, meaning that it is not about self-indulgence and
pleasure. Aur bhi dukh hain zamane mein mohabbat ke siwa
An acid test is something that proves whether something is good, effective, etc, or not.
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7. A skeleton in the cupboard.
If you have a skeleton in the cupboard, or in the closet, you have a secret in your past which
could damage you if it became known.
2005
This expression, first recorded in 1539, alludes to a tool that must be sharpened by being held to
a grindstone.
knock down or over with a feather; knock sideways, overcome with surprise or astonishment
The news of his death knocked me for a loop.
Being fired without any warning threw me for a loop.
Jane was knocked sideways when she found out she won.
The first two of these hyperbolic colloquial usages, dating from the first half of the 1900s, allude
to the comic-strip image of a person pushed hard enough to roll over in the shape of a loop.
The third hyperbolic term, often put as You could have knocked me down with a feather,
intimating that something so light as a feather could knock one down, dates from the early
1800s; the fourth was first recorded in 1925.
Drub, beat up
He didn't just push you—he took you to the cleaners. [Slang; early 1900s]
2006
To play with something; to play with something, using one's fingers; to fiddle with something.
I asked Jason to stop twiddling with the pencils.
Someone is twiddling with the stereo controls.
(2) Vamp up
Make up
vamp up an excuse for not attending the meeting
(5) Give someone the bum's rush forcefully remove someone from a place
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Appear imminent in a threatening, magnified form
The possibility of civil war loomed large on the horizon.
Martha wanted to take it easy for a week, but the bar exam loomed large.
This term employs loom in the sense of "come into view", a usage dating from the late 1500s.
Delay
The advertising campaign is hanging fire until they decide how much to spend on it.
This expression originally referred to the 17th-century flintlock musket, where the priming
powder ignited but often failed to explode the main charge, a result called hanging fire. [c. 1800]
__________________________
2007
Suppress
I don't know how but we'll have to put the lid on that rumor about her.
Let's keep the lid on our suspicions.
The word lid here is used in the sense of "a cover for a container." [Early 1900s]
of Something temporary
2) Flavour if the mouth
Something that is prominent in the public eye for a short time then fades out of interest.
Originally a term of approval for something that was up to the minute and desirable. It has been
used ironically from the late 20th century to pass disdainful comment on things which pass out of
fashion quickly. For example, the "one hit wonders" of the music business.
Military had been waiting for zero hour to start the operation against terrorist in Afghanistan
3) Zero hours
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the feeling that a situation is bad and is not likely to improve
Come on, it's not all doom and gloom, if we make a real effort we could still win.
5) To pig out
8) No matters
2008
i. Blow one's top
This expression may come from a folk tale involving these two animals, or from the name of an
English inn where travellers told such tales.
W.S. Gilbert used it in The Yeomen of the Guard (1888), where Jack Point and Wilfred the Jailer
make up a story about the hero's fictitious death: "Tell a tale of cock and bull, Of convincing
detail full." [c. 1600]
To stop what one has been doing, for the remainder of the night.
viii. Hang up
x. By and by
2009
This expression alludes to a 16th-century French dice game, lourche, where to incur a lurch
meant to be far behind the other players. It later was used in cribbage and other games, as well as
being used in its present figurative sense by about 1600.
This term originally was applied to a vessel that has come out of water, either by running
aground or being put in dry dock, and is therefore unable to move. By the mid-1800s it was
being used figuratively.
Survive difficulties
If she can just weather the storm of that contract violation, she'll be fine.
This expression alludes to a ship coming safely through bad weather. [Mid-1600s]
This idiom uses brunt in the sense of "the main force of an enemy's attack," which was sustained
by the front lines of the defenders. [Second half of 1700s]
If you meet someone halfway, you accept some of their ideas and make concessions.
If you want to settle the issues you have to meet me halfway
(vi) Turncoat
one who goes to work / fight / play for the opposing side, traitor
That turncoat! He went to work for the competition - Sears.
Ahmed is Turncoat and we should not relied upon him
2010
1. Make for (intr, preposition)
2. Yeoman's service
Efficient, useful or loyal service;arduous work
They've done yeoman's work in raising money for the organization.
Tipu sultan rendered yeoman service for the the Islam
5. A casting vote
decisive vote
The speaker used his casting vote in the favour of proposition
7. Iconoclast
One who attacks and seeks to overthrow traditional or popular ideas or institutions.
One who destroys sacred religious images.
He was an iconoclast who refused to be bound by tradition.
8. A swan song
A farewell or final appearance, action, or work.
The beautiful legendary song sung only once by a swan in its lifetime, as it is dying.
I'm resigning tomorrow; this project was my swan song.
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