Easy on the eye: good looking.
e.g. I say, your
girlfriend is easy on the eye.
Act your age: behave yourself
according to your age..
e.g. You’re almost an adult. Come on, act your age, and stop behaving like a spoiled brat!
Call it a day:
consider something to be done or finished.
e.g. Let’s call it a day, and
just go home.
Nod is as good as a wink: take note of the hint.
e.g. I think he was
trying to tell you to resign; a nod is as good as a wink.
Butter up: flatter.
e.g. Now that you have been promoted, everybody seems to butter up you.
Bang-up: excellent.
e.g. We did spend a bang-up week in Greece
No oil painting: ugly.
e.g. To tell the truth, the dress you bought me is no
oil painting.
All hot and bothered: agitated, confused,
or excited.
e.g. She was all hot and bothered when she heard the
news of her daughter’s divorce.
Lame duck:
someone who needs help but undeserved.
e.g. My brother, who
is always unemployed, is a lame duck to me.
Buy it: die.
e.g. During the car crash, I thought I was going to buy it.
Much of a muchness: practically the same.
e.g. I don’t see any difference between
the twins; they’re pretty much of a muchness to me.
Catch it: be
scolded.
e.g. If you do this again, you’ll catch
it.
Also-ran:
someone not likely to win.
e.g.
In this presidential election, he was just an also-ran.
In less than two months, he called it quit.
Turn in:
go to bed.
e.g.
Come on, guys, it’s time to turn in.
Stephen Lau
Copyright© by Stephen
Lau
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