Thursday, April 28, 2016

High horse

High horse - a mood or attitude of stubborn arrogance or contempt.

Example - "Get off your high horse and apologize!"

Image - https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh91ff_DLsWlnIg7fyXwhWLCXP8AaK0C2OEunqIUCQhxEwldtPQcSqEgFQ40A9Sx8THuMXP1WMaDIyvARKqjvP5lvyRnZ9JQV3cIlqH46daTAFJwAvYvYBQXoD9RwXU9d-t13cE3-9Q4pQ/s1600/Rottenecards_96121995_6yyd4x6274.png

Excuse/pardon my French

Excuse my French - said when you are pretending to be sorry for using a word that may be considered offensive; forgive my strong language.

Example -"You've got to be f***ing kidding me! Pardon my French, but that's insane"



Image - https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/30/PEGI_bad_language.png


To mouth off

To mouth off - to talk in an unpleasantly loud and boastful or opinionated manner.

Example - "He was mouthing off about society in general"

Image - http://clearpointagency.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/bigstock-businessman-yelling-through-a-48335648.jpg

A sore loser

A sore loser - someone who becomes upset or angry when they lose a game or competition.



Image - https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/48/91/7c/48917c3e866ffd1f881985612dccbab0.jpg

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Until you are blue in the face

Until you are blue in the face - if you say something until you are blue in the face, you keep saying the same thing again and again and again but no one listens to you.

Example - "I can tell him to tidy his room until I am blue in the face, but it's always a mess."



Image - http://bunakovateacher.ru/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/672170513_DigVs-M-1.jpg



Brolly

Brolly - an umbrella.

Example - "I've lost another brolly"

Image - https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg4ZufJneCZOsSrUmPKmmZ3RJdorEOwk9kl3sRUSqF0LqfylGG8JQYFQ7ZTnmZN8Na31RiuXDrEvuDEpRT-0eWSfiOSkAkVvPN6UmnyEiSYN-Rn3LT9YAi6I92FlvNmlw_PCZQL6NG_uWoi/s400/chapeu+de+chuva.png

Putative

Putative - generally considered or reputed to be.

Example - "The putative leader of the terrorist cell was arrested yesterday"

Image - https://i.ytimg.com/vi/p_TZFqCDNas/maxresdefault.jpg

To besiege

To besiege - to surround and harass.

Example - "She spent the whole day besieged by newsman"

Image - http://i2.wp.com/img.chinasmack.com/www/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/hong-kong-residents-protest-harass-mainland-tourists-05.jpg

Ripple effect

Ripple effect - the continuing and spreading result of an event or action.

Example - "The bank crash has had a ripple effect on the whole community"

Image - http://api.ning.com/files/dxpgMxwg-xDkYohiQZE*ROErA7n--ks49gj-aTpTvY0IdhUvJoldPLhiF2G7pcl6vDRmSaHUnpZ6agyKkx2VXCOWpzuF2dzI/cliparttherippleeffect1024x488.png

Does what it says on the tin

Does what it says on the tin - it does exactly what is intended to do.

Example - "The hotel does exactly what it says on the tin and offers customers a relaxing break"

Image - http://www.quotehd.com/imagequotes/authors34/tmb/richard-bailey-quote-if-people-want-to-guarantee-their-survival-then-t.jpg



Cut from the same cloth

Cut from the same cloth - of the same nature; similar.

Example - "Don't assume all women are cut from the same cloth"

Image - http://oels.byu.edu/student/idioms/idioms/images/cut_from_same_cloth.gif

Lay of the land

Lay of the land - nature, arrangement.

Example - "As soon as I get the lay of the land in my new job, things will get better"

Image - http://www.quotehd.com/imagequotes/authors41/tmb/peter-likins-quote-our-job-is-to-help-him-get-the-lay-of-the-land-as-s.jpg

To do a number on someone

To do a number on someone  - to damage or harm someone.

Example - "Tom did a real number on Mary when he went out with her friend"

Image - http://izquotes.com/quotes-pictures/quote-they-looked-at-me-like-i-was-some-kind-of-threat-jagger-really-tried-to-put-me-down-but-there-was-anita-pallenberg-257874.jpg

To speak to

To speak to - to indicate, to signal something.

Example - "This event speaks to the need for good communication"
                  "Your present state of employment speaks to your need for a better education"

Image - https://cdn2.iconfinder.com/data/icons/business-icons-3-2/256/Decision_Making-512.png



Beyond the pale

Beyond the pale - outside the bounds of acceptable behaviour.

Example - "The language my father used was beyond the pale"

Image - http://www.quotehd.com/imagequotes/authors44/tmb/fred-thomas-quote-this-racial-thing-is-so-sick-its-just-beyond-the.jpg

Since time immemorial

Since time immemorial - since a very long time ago.

Example - "My hometown has had a big parade on the Fourth of July since time immemorial"

Image - http://www.coolnsmart.com/images/cns/coolnsmart-11724.jpg

Fateful

Fateful - producing a serious and usually a bad result; having far-reaching and often disastrous consequences or implications.

Example - "Then, just over a year ago, he was faced with a fateful choice"

Image - http://img.picturequotes.com/2/461/460329/the-right-way-to-wholeness-is-made-up-of-fateful-detours-and-wrong-turnings-quote-1.jpg

Peccadillo

Peccadillo - a relatively minor fault or sin.

Example - "He dismissed what had happened as a mere peccadillo"


Image - http://wordinfo.info/words/images/peccadillo.jpg


To pick someone's brain(s)

To pick someone's brain(s) - to obtain information by questioning someone who is better informed about a subject than oneself.

Example - "Mind if I pick your brain for a minute?"

Image - http://business2blogger.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Can-I-Pick-Your-Brain1.jpg

Monday, April 25, 2016

Paroxysm

Paroxysm - a sudden strong feeling or expression of emotion that cannot be controlled.

Example - "He went into paroxysms of laughter"


Image - https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/236x/5c/b4/56/5cb456becaf0a149976a10577185585f.jpg

For dear life

For dear life - desperately and urgently; with as much effort as possible.

Example - "I ran for dear life when I saw the tiger"

Image - https://i.ytimg.com/vi/4N1gfKirKAg/hqdefault.jpg

Saturday, April 23, 2016

To take a different tack

To take a different tack - to try a different approach.

Example - "Instead of always asking him what he wants, why don't you take a different tack and tell him what you want?"

Image - http://www.quotehd.com/imagequotes/authors25/gail-reese-quote-we-have-taken-a-different-tack.jpg

To gloat

To gloat - to dwell on one's own success or another's misfortune with smugness or malignant pleasure.

Example - "His enemies gloated over his death"

Image - http://quotes.lifehack.org/media/quotes/quote-Al-Yankovic-i-mean-i-hate-to-gloat-but-141682_1.png



See -  Schadenfreude

To dish

To dish - to gossip or share intimate information.

Example - "Groups gather to dish about romances"

Image - https://animalliberationpressoffice.org/NAALPO/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/gossip.jpg

Chagrined

Chagrined /shÉ™-grÄ­n′/ - a keen feeling of mental uneasy, as of annoyance and embarrassment, caused by failure, disappointment, or a disconcerting event.

Example - "He was chagrined at the poor sales of his book"

Image - http://www.quotehd.com/imagequotes/authors28/tmb/chris-traulsen-quote-i-am-a-little-chagrined-that-other-fund.jpg


Amped up

Amped up - excited or energized - filled with intense energy and excitement.

Example - "We were so amped up for the game that we forgot to eat"


Image - http://www.azquotes.com/picture-quotes/quote-when-people-are-amped-up-they-listen-to-more-upbeat-loud-songs-a-frank-sinatra-album-mark-hoppus-147-9-0952.jpg

To oust

To oust - to drive out or expel someone from a position or place.

Example - "The reformists were ousted from power"

Image - http://www.quotehd.com/imagequotes/authors26/miriam-defensor-santiago-quote-i-believe-they-dont-want-to-put-a-stop.jpg

To reel

To reel - to feel very confused and shocked and unable to act.

Example - "We are reeling in amazement from the news that we had won all that the money.

Image - http://www.revelationtv.com/images/uploads/thumbnails/news/confused-by-credit.jpg

Purview

Purview - an area within which someone or something has authority, influence or knowledge.

Example - "That question is outside my purview"

Image - http://i.quoteaddicts.com/media/q1/342497.png

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Incontrovertible

Incontrovertible - impossible to doubt because of being obviously true.

Example - "Some people believe Neil Armstrong's landing on the moon is an incontrovertible fact while conspiracists say otherwise"


Image - http://wordinfo.info/words/images/incontrovertible-1.jpg

Nagging

Nagging - discomforting.

Example - "I have a nagging suspicion that one of the wheels has a puncture"

Image - https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/cd/8a/98/cd8a98e8c15ca10b4eddc9797ac25673.jpg

Tidal wave

Tidal wave - any widespread or powerful movement, opinion, tendency.

Example - "A tidal wave of public indignation"

Image - https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRklPKmlnGHlgyFkqCX8eoBhHv-kh7Em_Vb2Z6U2_MZfc-miOpB

To spew

To spew - to expel large quantities of something rapidly and forcibly.

Example - "Buses were spewing out black clouds of exhaust"

Image - http://img.picturequotes.com/2/139/138061/authority-is-permission-to-spew-platitudes-to-people-below-you-quote-1.jpg

Guarded

Guarded - careful not too give too much information; cautious and having possible reservations.

Example - "We view these changes with guarded optimism"

Image - http://www.quotehd.com/imagequotes/authors7/patricia-heaton-patricia-heaton-when-it-comes-to-accepting-emotional.jpg

Hold your peace

Hold your peace - to avoid an argument by remaining silent.

Example - "Speak now or forever hold your peace"

Image - http://images.firstcovers.com/covers/userquotes/s/speak_now,_or-49609.jpg

To say your piece

To say your piece - to say what you are obviously wanting to say, to say what's on your mind.

Example - "Just say your piece and then go"

Image - https://gms101.files.wordpress.com/2013/02/say-your-piece.jpg



In the throes

In the throes - in the midst of a difficult struggle.

Example - "The country was in the throes of economic collapse"

Image - http://img.picturequotes.com/2/412/411014/we-are-in-the-throes-of-a-transition-where-every-publication-has-to-think-of-their-digital-strategy-quote-1.jpg

Hey presto

Hey presto - a phrase announcing the successful completion of a trick, or to suggest that something has been done so easily that it seems to be magic.

Example - "Press the start button and, hey presto, a copy comes out the other end"

Image - http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/518vZEK1pTL._SX258_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

To gush over

To gush over - to speak or write about someone or something with wild enthusiasm.

Example - "They returned from the store and gushed over the great shoes they had bought"


Image - https://cdn-webimages.wimages.net/050743f0c74616347990f66fae06c300226261-wm.jpg

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Slippery slope

Slippery slope - a course of action likely to lead to something bad or disastrous; the potential beginning of a trend;  if we allow something relatively harmless today, we may start a trend that results in something currently unthinkable becoming accepted.

Example - "He's on the slippery slope towards a life of crime"

Image - https://blogs.thegospelcoalition.org/justintaylor/files/2013/04/Slippery-Slope.png

Stripped-down

Stripped-down - something that has been reduced to its simplest form.

Example - "I think the stripped-down version of your proposal has more chance of being accepted"

Image - http://marjijsherman.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/MakeItSimple-300x300.jpg

Scab

Scab - a worker who does not join a strike or who takes the place of another worker who is on strike; a worker who accepts employment or replaces a union worker during a strike.

Image - http://www.theglobeandmail.com/migration_catalog/article3995178.ece/BINARY/w620/UnknownDon'tBeAScab

Monday, April 18, 2016

To hold up one's end of the bargain

To hold up one's end of the bargain - to do one's agreed part in some arrangement.

Example - "Jackie didn't hold up her end of the bargain so we're excluding her from the deal"

Image - http://www.boardofwisdom.com/cachetogo/images/quotes/599960.png

Unwavering

Unwavering - marked by firm determination or resolution.

Example - "He's shown us unwavering loyalty"

Image - http://www.relatably.com/q/img/unwavering-quotes/quote-Beau-Mirchoff-a-healthy-relationship-is-built-on-unwavering-226952.png

On the horn

On the horn - on the telephone.

Example - "Let me get on the horn with him and ask"

Image - http://rlv.zcache.com/get_on_the_horn_postcard-r13dce45754f54aabaa4d1245e41e2a63_vgbaq_8byvr_324.jpg

To be infirm of

To be infirm of - not physically or mentally strong.

Example - "She was infirm of body but still keen on mind"

Image - http://images.digopaul.com/wp-content/uploads/related_images/2015/09/08/infirm_3.jpg

To jones

To jones - to have a fixation on; to be addicted to.

Example - "Paul was jonesing for some coke again"

Image - https://memecrunch.com/meme/3IU3H/jonesing-for-coffee/image.png?w=400&c=1

Atwitter

Atwitter - to be in a statement of nervous excitement.

Example - "The crowd was atwitter with expectation"

Image - http://www.chicagonow.com/cheaper-than-therapy/files/2012/03/nervous.jpg

To have the upper-hand

To have the upper-hand - to have more power than anyone else and so have control.

Example - "By half time, the Italian team seemed to have the upper hand"

Image - http://cdn.socialeyezer.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/Why-Social-Media-Gives-Your-Business-the-Upper-Hand.jpg

To pull for someone or something

To pull for someone or something - to support and cheer for someone, a group or something.

Example - "Good luck in the game tomorrow. We are all pulling for you"

Image - https://www.greenbiz.com/sites/default/files/styles/gbz_article_primary_breakpoints_kalapicture_screen-md_1x/public/images/articles/featured/10212010rooting.jpg?itok=HLXcgkT9

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