高考英语复习素材谚语整理讲义.docx
《高考英语复习素材谚语整理讲义.docx》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《高考英语复习素材谚语整理讲义.docx(7页珍藏版)》请在淘文阁 - 分享文档赚钱的网站上搜索。
1、Bury the hatchet If you bury the hatchet, you make peace with someone and stop arguing or fighting. Bury your head in the sand If someone buries their head in the sand, they ignore something that is obviously wrong. Busmans holiday A busmans holiday is when you spend your free time doing the same so
2、rt of work as you do in your job. Busted flush Someone or something that had great potential but ended up a useless failure is a busted flush. Busy as a beaver If youre as busy as a beaver, youre very busy indeed. Butter wouldnt melt in their mouth If someone looks as if butter wouldnt melt in their
3、 mouth, they look very innocent. Butterflies in your stomach The nervous feeling before something important or stressful is known as butterflies in your stomach. Button your lip If you button your lip, you keep quiet and dont speak. It is also used as a way of telling someone to shut up. By a hairs
4、breadth If a person escapes from some danger by a hairs breadth, they only just managed to avoid it. The breadth is the thickness of a hair, so they probably feel somewhat lucky because the margin between success and what could easily have been failure was so close. By a long chalk (UK) If you beat
5、somebody by a long chalk, you win easily and comfortably. By a whisker If you do something by a whisker, you only just manage to do it and come very near indeed to failing. By dint of This means as a result of or because of: It would be good to think hed risen to position of Chief Executive by dint
6、of hard work. By heart If you learn something by heart, you learn it word for word. By hook or by crook If you are prepared to do something by hook or by crook, you are willing to do anything, good or bad, to reach your goal. By leaps and bounds Something that happens by leaps and bounds happens ver
7、y quickly in big steps. By the back door If something is started or introduced by the back door, then it is not done openly or by following the proper procedures. By the book If you do something by the book, you do it exactly as you are supposed to. By the same token If someone applies the same rule
8、 to different situations, they judge them by the same token: If things go well, hes full of praise, but, by the same token, when things go wrong he gets furious. By the seat of your pants If you do something by the seat of your pants, you do it without help from anyone. By the skin of your teeth If
9、you do something by the skin of your teeth, you only just manage to do it and come very near indeed to failing. By word of mouth If something becomes known by word of mouth, it gets known by being talked about rather than through publicity or advertising, etc. Cakes not worth the candle If someone s
10、ays that the cakes not worth the candle, they mean that the result will not be worth the effort put in to achieve it. Call a spade a spade A person who calls a spade a spade is one speaks frankly and makes little or no attempt to conceal their opinions or to spare the feelings of their audience. Cal
11、l the dogs off If someone calls off their dogs, they stop attacking or criticising someone. Call the shots If you call the shots, you are in charge and tell people what to do. Call the tune The person who calls the tune makes the important decisions about something. Can of worms If an action can cre
12、ate serious problems, it is opening a can of worms. Cant dance and its too wet to plow (USA) When you cant dance and its too wet to plow, you may as well do something because you cant or dont have the opportunity to do anything else. Cant hold a candle If something cant hold a candle to something el
13、se, it is much worse. Canary in a coal mine (UK) A canary in a coal mine is an early warning of danger. Card up your sleeve If you have a card up your sleeve, you have a surprise plan or idea that you are keeping back until the time is right. Carpetbagger A carpetbagger is an opportunist without any
14、 scruples or ethics, or a politican who wants to represent a place they have no connection with. Carrot and stick If someone offers a carrot and stick, they offer an incentive to do something combined with the threat of punishment. Carry the can If you carry the can, you take the blame for something
15、, even though you didnt do it or are only partly at fault. Case by case If things are done case by case, each situation or issue is handled separately on its own merits and demerits. Cash in your chips If you cash in your chips, you sell something to get what profit you can because you think its val
16、ue is going to fall. It can also mean to die. Cast doubt on If you make other people not sure about a matter, then you have cast doubt on it. Cast pearls before swine If you cast pearls before swine, you offer something of value to someone who doesnt appreciate it- swine are pigs. Cast your mind bac
17、k If somebody tells you to cast your mind back on something, they want you to think about something that happened in the past, but which you might not remember very well, and to try to remember as much as possible. Cast your net widely If you cast your net widely, you use a wide range of sources whe
18、n trying to find something. Castles in the air Plans that are impractical and will never work out are castles in the air. Cat among the pigeons If something or someone puts, or sets or lets, the cat among the pigeons, they create a disturbance and cause trouble. Cat burglar A cat burglar is a skillf
19、ul thief who breaks into places without disturbing people or setting off alarms. Cat fur and kitty britches (USA) When I used to ask my grandma what was for dinner, she would say cat fur and kitty britches. This was her Ozark way of telling me that I would get what she cooked. (Ozark is a region in
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- 高中英语精品资料 新高考英语精品专题 高中英语作文指导 高中英语课件 高中英语学案 高中英语模拟试卷 高考英语解题指导 高中英语精品练习
限制150内