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Thursday, October 1, 2020
English Idioms Involving Clothes
noun: Someone attractive, silly, or pretentious.
adjective:
noun:
1. Using experience, instinct, or guesswork as opposed to methodical planning.
Labels:
Teaching English
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7 comments:
I enjoy these too, they just make learning English confusing for the Japanese students though .
I often use 'take my hat off to xx' when I see some fantastic stitching on a blog
then there are: 'at the drop of a hat', tied to Mum's apron strings', 'under the belt', 'up one's sleeve', off the cuff, 'he's a slipper', 'blue stocking', white collar worker', 'with cap in hand'....
I'm not familiar with "shirtsleeve" as an adjective. Here it is used more in the form of "roll up your shirtsleeves", meaning get ready to do some hard work.
To "shirtfront" someone is an Australian expression which got an article on the BBC when a former Prime Minister used it:
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-30173969
How funny ! THANKS, Pam :)
xoxo
Nadine
Shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves in four generations. Don't get your knickers in a knot.
I've got to think of more -- I know there are some!
Thanks for the smiles this morning.
xx, Carol
I knew most of these, but not all of them! I love learning something new.
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