Dead
from the neck upwards: stupid.
e.g.
Don’t follow his example; he’s dead from the neck upwards.
In
for it:
likely to have trouble.
e.g.
If you don't listen to my advice, you're in for it.
Easy on
the eye: good looking.
e.g. I
say, your girlfriend is easy on the eye.
Killer: a
very funny joke.
e.g. That last one was really a
killer; everybody laughed.
Kick back:
relax and enjoy.
e.g I really want to kick
back and enjoy the music.
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!
In a
jiffy: soon.
e.g.
The manager will see you in a
jiffy.
Next to
nothing: hardly anything.
e.g.
“Did she leave you anything at all?” “Well, next to nothing.”
Go: attempt.
e.g. Have a go at doing this on your own.
Easy
mark: a likely victim.
e.g. If
you are so unsuspecting, you may become an easy mark for
swindlers.
Bazillion: a
great number of.
e.g.
The national debt is now in bazillion dollars, and the
Congress needs to do something about that.
No way: not
at all.
e.g.
“Are you going to give him a hand?” “No way; he’ll be on his own.”
Beat:
broke, no money.
e.g.
Without a job, we are beat, no copper and no bread.
Chip on
one’s shoulder: a grudge against.
e.g.
She still has a chip on her shoulder: your infidelity some years
ago.
Ace
someone out: win out
over someone.
e.g. I plan to ace him
out in the first round of
the competition.
Head
above water: out of debt.
e.g. Nowadays, it is not easy to keep your head
above water.
Mean-green: money.
e.g. Can I borrow a little mean-green from you?
Ask me
another: I don't know.
e.g.
"Does your daughter want a baby?" "Ask me another!"
No
two ways about it: no other alternative.
e.g. The man had to file for
bankruptcy; no two ways about it.
Stephen
Lau
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