"I don't give a hoot"
This idiom is one of the oldest ,and it means that I don't care or I'm not carious about whatever , there are some people still using it ,especially the old .However , unfortunate , most of us nowadays are using another phrase which is completely rude . Of course it pops up in your mind immediately when is said rude .As a result , coursing became a habit because of us , we don't analyze the words before saying them , that's why it became a habit .
Thanks yall
Monday, April 22, 2013
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
a + lost + cause = a lost cause ( what !!! )
Hi everyone ... !
I am interested in learning idioms with more details such as etymology. like in Arabic language we have such idioms that have stories or reasons behind them. I would like to discuss "a lost cause" idiom.
According to Speak English Like an American, this idiom means something hopeless. Moreover, I find that meaning in another website with synonyms ! ( excited face )
Also, according to the oxford English dictionary " lost cause" mentions as:
As we can see clearly that there are many usages for this idiom for many years. You can find a good meaning for many idioms ad one of them " a lost cause"
I search in Google to see how it work, and I find this:
" Baby you're lost
Baby you're lost
Baby you're a lost cause
There's too many people you used to know
They see you coming they see you go
They know your secrets and you know theirs
This town is crazy; nobody cares "
Baby you're lost
Baby you're a lost cause
There's too many people you used to know
They see you coming they see you go
They know your secrets and you know theirs
This town is crazy; nobody cares "
Have a great day !
Raedah Alyousif
" Get Real "
Hello everyone,
I searched about " get real" slang, I hope you enjoy with the informations that I found.
Definition:
Get real!: Be realistic!
This idiom is used when someone
seems naive. "Get real!" shows
a negative opinion of another person's
ideas and means something like
"How could you believe that?"
Or
For example:
He wants five million dollars to play hockey? Tell him to get real.
seems naive. "Get real!" shows
a negative opinion of another person's
ideas and means something like
"How could you believe that?"
He wants five million dollars to play hockey? Tell him to get real.
This is Etymology according to the "Oxford English Dictionary" ,
slang (orig. U.S.). to get real : to be realistic or serious; to face facts; to abandon a naive, insincere, or erroneous opinion. Now freq. in imper., used to suggest that an idea or statement is foolish, overly idealistic, or quite wrong.
1969 Current Slang (Univ. S. Dakota) 3 6 Get real, to tell the truth.
1980 Maledicta 3 ii. 222 The aggressiveness of the younger ass-bandit who wants to score in sex as a game is, in the older homosexual, taken as evidence he is a dizzy queen who doesn't know when to quit (how to live or when to die) and won't get real (face facts).
1987 K. Lette Girls' Night Out (1989) 89 ‘Shit, Jo. I didn't know he meant anything to you.’ ‘Get real. He doesn't.’
1993 Caves & Caving Winter 40/1 For those who feel that politics have no place in caving or other sporting activities—get real!
1998 C. Aherne et al. Royle Family Scripts: Series 1 (1999) Episode 4. 112 Denise: I'll tell you who else is gay. Dave: Who? Denise: Antony. Antony: Get real.
2002 Village Voice (N.Y.) 36/2 Again at war in the Middle East, the U.S. could decide to get real about investing in alternative fuels.
Nouf Alowaysi
Nouf Alowaysi
Monday, April 15, 2013
Get Real
According to “OED” Oxford English Dictionary, get real is a combination of an idiom and slang which most of uses as a slang. So, to get real : to be realistic or serious; to face facts; to abandon a naive, insincere, or erroneous opinion. Now freq. in imper., used to suggest that an idea or statement is foolish, overly idealistic, or quite wrong. Normally, the connotation of this idiom is most likely depend on the situation, however , generally it has a positive tone.
second, from my researching to find out the history of this idiom, I found that in 1969 was the first using by Current Slang (Univ. S. Dakota) .So, it could say get real has approximately 45 years old. Get real was initiated by academic people as I have found in different sites and books.
For example, I'm going to Las Vegas. I know I'll win a lot of money!" .
When someone tells you to get real, they want you to get a reality check and to stop behaving as though you're living in a fantasy world. Could apply to pretty much anyone or anything (as in a company or organisation) that mentally is not living in reality.
Another example, Employee: I demand $75,000 a year, a company car, 50,000 shares of the company's stock, every benifit imaginable and a months vacation every year to start.
Interviewer: Get real, this is a burger flipping job, not an executive job.
ALI
second, from my researching to find out the history of this idiom, I found that in 1969 was the first using by Current Slang (Univ. S. Dakota) .So, it could say get real has approximately 45 years old. Get real was initiated by academic people as I have found in different sites and books.
For example, I'm going to Las Vegas. I know I'll win a lot of money!" .
When someone tells you to get real, they want you to get a reality check and to stop behaving as though you're living in a fantasy world. Could apply to pretty much anyone or anything (as in a company or organisation) that mentally is not living in reality.
Another example, Employee: I demand $75,000 a year, a company car, 50,000 shares of the company's stock, every benifit imaginable and a months vacation every year to start.
Interviewer: Get real, this is a burger flipping job, not an executive job.
ALI
Sunday, April 14, 2013
to stand a chance
13. to stand a chance(good, fair) chance : see stand n.1
1796 J. Morse Amer. Universal Geogr. (new ed.) II. 108 He..hardly stood a chance of becoming a beggar.
1885 Manch. Examiner 12 Nov. 5/1 The Ministry..stand a good chance of seeing themselves reduced to insignificance.
The closest he's ever gotten to being in a videogame was as part of a 1992 EGM practical joke, but now it's come to light that one of gaming's oldest red herrings, Sheng Long, is a playable character in Street Fighter IV's arcade version.
Sheng Long started life as a mistranslation of the "shō ryū" (Rising Dragon) part of Ryu's Shōryūken.When translated into Chinese Pinyin, "shō ryū" becomes "Sheng Long," and it's from here that the misconception was had. In the original Japanese version of the game, Ryu would say to defeated opponents: "If you cannot break through the Rising Dragon Punch, you cannot win!" In the translated version, it became "You must defeat Sheng Long to stand a chance." The inevitable happened, as English-speaking players assumed Sheng Long was a person, and EGM swiftly took advantage.
EGM claimed that Sheng Long could be unlocked by taking zero hits during an entire game, and then letting the timer run out in the final battle against M. Bison without giving or receiving any damage. Aptly, the writer of this tip was W.A Stokens, or "Waste Tokens."
The legacy of Mr. Stokens, however, lives on, as Capcom has seen to it that Sheng Long is finally about to take his rightful place in Street Fighter history. He'll be armed with a "Forbidden Shōryūken," and will most likely be a total badass. We don't know how to unlock him.
For more, here are some sentence to start use the SWEATY IDIOM in many ways...
We might stand a chance of winning if we continue to play as well as we did today.
If you're thinking about suing someone, talk to a lawyer to see if you stand a chance.
Shy students don't stand a chance in such a large class.
Do you think I stand a chance of winning first place?
Finally, My classmates if we could set a law by our own for more attention on one academic purpose, do you mind chatting on WhatsApp or any other Apps in Cellphones as one GROUP?
Believe me our LAW will become " USE IT OR LOSE IT ", after any class we take. And we might stand a chance of learning English sufficiently and helpfully if we continue
to practice.
WITH MY BEST REGARD,
SOMAIAH
over one's head
Hi everyone,
I would like to explain the idiom over one’s head it is an adjective phrase.
It means:
a1626 Bacon Advt. Holy Warre in Certaine Misc. Wks. (1629) 86 It flies too high ouer Mens Heads.
I would like to explain the idiom over one’s head it is an adjective phrase.
It means:
- (idiomatic) More complex or confusing
than one can understand; beyond one’s comprehension.
This is way over my head. Can you explain it more simply?
- (idiomatic) More than one can handle; too much
(especially in over one’s head).
I’m in over my head on this project. Can you help?
- (idiomatic, sports) Performing
at a level greatly superior to one's usual level of
performance.
He just shot a spectacularly over his head round of golf and beat
all of us.
Connotation: This idiom has negative
connotation
Etymology: According to "OED" Oxford English Dictionary, It used at early 1600
over (one's) head: beyond one's comprehension or intellectual capacity a1626 Bacon Advt. Holy Warre in Certaine Misc. Wks. (1629) 86 It flies too high ouer Mens Heads.
1837 E. Bulwer-Lytton Ernest Maltravers I. iii. i. 247 Talking over the heads of the company.
1886 H. Smart Outsider II. ii. 20 Welstead quickly became cognizant that his wife was over his head.
Synonyms: | baffling, bewildering, beyond comprehension, beyond one, complex, complicated, deep, hard to understand, incomprehensible, profound, unfathomable |
Mada Ashkan.
Thursday, April 11, 2013
(to) buckle down
Hello,everyone I would like introduce the idiom (to) buckle down.
It means to startworking seriously, apply oneself to hard work.
If you start stadying before take a test, it's buckle down.
According to the Phrase Finder, this is a US phrase, although it may well be related to an earllier British phrase "buckle to', which ,means much the same thing. that datea back to the early 18th century, for example, from John Arbuthnot's story
John Bull in The Law is a bottomless pit , 1712:
"Squire South buckled too, to assist his friend Nic."
'Buckle down' is first cited in the American literary/cultural magazine Atlantic Monthly, 1865:
"If he would only buckle to serious study."
Arata Kobayashi
Hi everyone.
http://www.answers.com/library/Idioms
This is one of the great websites to study idioms.
This site is organized by several categories. So, if you want to know the idiom about animals, you should choose the category of animals. you will be immediately find the ideom you are looking for.
Arata kobayashi
http://www.answers.com/library/Idioms
This is one of the great websites to study idioms.
This site is organized by several categories. So, if you want to know the idiom about animals, you should choose the category of animals. you will be immediately find the ideom you are looking for.
Arata kobayashi
Idioms: a bit to add fuel to the fire from Answers.com »
Idioms: a bit to add fuel to the fire from Answers.com The Dictionary of Idioms contains idiomatic words and phrases, slang terms, figures of speech, common proverbs and metaphors, each clearly defin...
Beside the Point
Hi, this is Karol Andersson, class instructor. I'd like to draw your attention to the interesting histories that most idioms have. An idiom's history often illustrates how it came to have the figurative meaning it holds today.
As an example, consider the idiom beside the point, an adjective phrase meaning irrelevant. Beside the point refers to arguments that are "not directly connected with the main subject or problem that you are talking about," according to the Longman Dictionary.
If the point of your debate is the cost of textbooks and you start talking about graduation deadlines, then you are adding information that is beside the point.
According to the Big Site of Amazing Facts, the expression comes from the ancient archery, the skillful practice of shooting arrows with a bow. The literal meaning refers to the center point on a target, so beside the point means "a shot that is wide of the target." English speakers began using the expression figuratively around the year 1352.
As an example, consider the idiom beside the point, an adjective phrase meaning irrelevant. Beside the point refers to arguments that are "not directly connected with the main subject or problem that you are talking about," according to the Longman Dictionary.
If the point of your debate is the cost of textbooks and you start talking about graduation deadlines, then you are adding information that is beside the point.
According to the Big Site of Amazing Facts, the expression comes from the ancient archery, the skillful practice of shooting arrows with a bow. The literal meaning refers to the center point on a target, so beside the point means "a shot that is wide of the target." English speakers began using the expression figuratively around the year 1352.
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Idiom Site
Peace upon you,
"Idiom Site" is the name of this remarkable website that explains the origins of some common idioms and proverbs in an alphabetized order. It's good, organized and easy to learn, I advise you all to check it out.
Rana Alharbi,
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
Learn More !
Hi everyone !
I
like this website because not only does it help the visual people to memorize
and remember idioms by using pictures, but also this website helps people to
use them correctly.
Another
website is : http://a4esl.org/q/h/idioms.html
This
website is amazing to train the mind. It involves some questions in different
level for idioms and verbal phrases, and you will remember the answer besides understanding
the situation. It is kind of sharing information between students, for that I
recommend this website.
Raedah Alyousif
Raedah Alyousif
English Daily
Dears:
I would like to share with you my experience about this English Daily website. Really, it's a wonderful page that not only for idioms but also a far extent of what are you thinking about. The below icons are samples how to log in, and to explore a new world of the following:
http://www.englishdaily626.com/
AliEnglish Daily
I would like to share with you my experience about this English Daily website. Really, it's a wonderful page that not only for idioms but also a far extent of what are you thinking about. The below icons are samples how to log in, and to explore a new world of the following:
http://www.englishdaily626.com/
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AliEnglish Daily
Monday, April 1, 2013
Somaiah Madany
" CARVE EVERY IDIOM BEFORE YOU LET IT FALL ! "
http://www.englishcurrent.com/idioms/esl-idioms-intermediate-advanced/
Hello every one..
I found a good website for learning the most popular idioms http://www.idiomeanings.com/idioms/. Each idiom in this website explains in terms: definition, example, dialog, video, article, and picture. Also, this site has a similar idiom to the original one .
I recommend this website for anyone who wants to learn idioms.
Mada Ashkan.
THE IDIOM CONNECTION
Hello every body, I found a such of a mazing website it's called The idiom connection. That website contains many categories of idioms below each one quizzes related to what we learn.
In addition, for each idiom there is definition and example which is more helpful.
I rocamand everyone who's interested to learn idioms to use this website.
Nouf Alowaysi
Learn English Today
Easy For All ! Idiom Site
This website “Idiom Site” is for us to learn the idioms. It’s
page of idioms arranged in alphabetical order.
The interface is easy to use, just select the character you want and start learning.
This group of idioms might be a good
start.
Ghada Bousbait
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