Idiom World
         By Fawad Jalil Yusufi
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Food Idioms

 acquire a taste for (something)

- to develop a liking for some kind of food or drink or something

My friend has recently acquired a taste for classical music.
apple of (someone`s) eye

- someone or something that one likes a lot

The little girl is the apple of her grandfather`s eye.
as black as a skillet

- very black

The bottom of the little boy's feet were as black as a skillet.
as busy as popcorn on a skillet

- very active

The children were as busy as popcorn on a skillet when the teacher entered the classroom.
as cool as a cucumber

- to be calm, to be not nervous or anxious

The man is as cool as a cucumber and never worries about anything.
as easy as apple pie

- very easy

The test that I wrote yesterday was as easy as apple pie.
as easy as duck soup

- very easy

It was as easy as duck soup to find the book that I wanted in the library.
as flat as a pancake

- very flat

The child's toy was as flat as a pancake after the car drove over it.
as hungry as a bear

- very hungry

I was as hungry as a bear when I returned home from work yesterday.
as nutty as a fruitcake

- silly, crazy

The man in the supermarket was as nutty as a fruitcake.
as red as a cherry

- bright red

My new sweater is as red as a cherry.
as slow as molasses in January

- very slow

The little boy is as slow as molasses in January and he never gets his work finished on time.
as sour as vinegar

- sour and disagreeable

The old man next door is as sour as vinegar.
as sweet as honey/sugar

- very sweet

The retired librarian is as sweet as honey and everybody loves her.
as thick as pea soup

- very thick (can be used with fog as well as with liquids)

The fog was as thick as pea soup when we walked along the beach.
as warm as toast

- very warm and cozy

Our house was as warm as toast when we went in from the rain.
at one sitting

- at one time, during one period

We ate most of the cake at one sitting.
back to the salt mines

- to go back to work (this is a humorous expression to express going back to unpleasant work)

"Lunch is over so let`s go back to the salt mines for the afternoon."
bad/rotten apple

- a bad person

The boy is a bad apple and he is always in some kind of trouble.
bad egg

- a bad person, a bum

My neighbor is a bad egg and you should avoid him if you can.
bear fruit

- to yield or give results

The woman's hard work at her business finally began to bear fruit when she started to make money.
best bib and tucker

- one's best clothes

I put on my best bib and tucker for the wedding reception.
big cheese

- an important person, a leader

My uncle is a big cheese in his company so you should be very nice to him.
big enchilada

- the biggest and most important thing or person

The new accounting manager is the big enchilada in our company.
binge and purge

- to overeat and then to vomit

The young woman had eating problems and she would often binge and purge her food.
bite off more than one can chew

- to try to do or eat more than you can manage

I bit off more than I could chew when I began to work at the store in the evening.
bite the hand that feeds one

- to harm someone who does good things for you

I do not want to make my company angry because I do not want to bite the hand that feeds me.
bitter pill to swallow

- something unpleasant that one must accept

It was a bitter pill to swallow when I learned that I would not get the job that I thought I would.
born with a silver spoon in one's mouth

- to be born to a wealthy family with many advantages

The boy was born with a silver spoon in his mouth and he never has to work very hard.
Bottoms up!

- everybody should drink now (this expression is used at the end of a drinking toast)

"Bottoms up," our host said at the beginning of the dinner.
bread and butter

- one's income/job to buy the basic needs of life like food/shelter/clothing

The voters are worried about bread-and-butter issues like jobs and taxes.
bread and water

- the most basic meal that is possible (just as you would get in prison)

The prisoners were fed bread and water for several days last winter.
bring home the bacon

- to earn your family`s living

Recently, I have been working very hard to bring home the bacon. I have no time to do anything else.
burn (something) to a crisp

- to burn something very badly

I burned the eggs to a crisp when I left the stove on while I was talking on the telephone.
butter (someone) up

- to flatter someone in order to get his or her favor or friendship

The man spends much time trying to butter up his boss so that he will not have to work so hard.
can't stomach (someone or something)

- to dislike or hate someone or something

I can't stomach the idea of meeting my old girlfriend.
carrot and stick

- the reward for someone if they do what you want or the punishment if they do not do what you want

The government took a carrot-and-stick approach to remove the people who were protesting against the construction of the dam.
cheese (someone) off

- to annoy/irritate/anger someone

I cheesed off my neighbor when I borrowed his ladder without telling him.
cheesed off

- to be bored/depressed/annoyed

I was cheesed off when I heard that I would not be able to go away for the weekend.
chew the fat with (someone)

- to chat with someone

We stayed up very late last night chewing the fat about our university days.
chips and dip

- potato chips and something to dip them into before eating them (potato chips are called crisps in the United Kingdom)

We bought some chips and dip for the party.
clear the table

- to remove the dishes and other eating utensils from a table after eating

We had to clear the table before we could eat our dessert.
coffee break

- a break from work to rest and drink coffee/tea

We usually have a coffee break every morning at 10 o`clock.
Come and get it!

- Dinner is ready. Come and eat.

"Come and get it," my mother called after she made dinner.
compare apples and oranges

- to compare two things that are not similar and should not be compared

It was like comparing apples and oranges when we compared our new boss to our old one.
cook (someone's) goose

- to damage or ruin someone

I think that I cooked my goose when I made a mistake at work today.
cook (something) to perfection

- to cook something perfectly

The chef always cooks the food to perfection at the small restaurant.
cook (something) up

- to cook something, to make some kind of plan

I do not know what my girlfriend is cooking up for the weekend but we will probably do something interesting.
couch potato

- someone who spends a lot of time on a couch watching television

My cousin is a couch potato and he never wants to leave his house.
cream of the crop

- the best of a group, the top choice

Our company is a very good place to work and is always able to hire the cream of the crop of university graduates.
a cream puff

- a person who is easily influenced or beaten

The boy is a cream puff and is always a victim of other people's insults.
cry over spilled/spilt milk

- to cry or complain about something that has already happened

You should not cry over spilled milk. The past is past and you cannot do anything to change it. (not one's) cup of tea

- something that one does not enjoy or do well (usually used in the negative)

Going to art galleries is not my cup of tea so I think that I will stay home this evening. cut the mustard

- to succeed, to do adequately what needs to be done

The young man was not able to cut the mustard and he had to leave the army after only one year.
dine out

- to eat a meal at a restaurant

I love to dine out at nice restaurants.
done to a T/turn

- to be cooked just right (just as one would cook a steak perfectly)

The steaks were done to a T when my friend cooked them on the barbecue.
down the hatch

- something is swallowed

My drink was down the hatch before I could order another one.
drop (someone/something) like a hot potato

- to suddenly stop being involved with someone or with some kind of a problem

The advertisers dropped the basketball star like a hot potato when he became involved in a scandal.
duck soup

- a task that does not require much effort

"It was like duck soup. I was able to finish my school project last night."
eat and run

- to eat a meal and then quickly leave

I had to eat and run in order to be on time for my evening class.
eat crow

- to admit that one is mistaken or defeated, to take back a mistaken statement

I was forced to eat crow and apologize for the things that I had said about my co-worker.
eat dirt

- to act humble, to accept another person's insults or bad treatment

We made the boy eat dirt after he accused us of lying.
eat high on/off the hog

- to eat expensive and high quality food

My uncle has been eating high on the hog since he got his new job.
eat humble pie

- to be humbled, to admit one`s error and apologize

Our boss was forced to eat humble pie after he made the wrong budget estimate for next year.
eat like a bird

- to eat only a small amount of food

The girl eats like a bird and is very slim.
eat like a horse

- to eat a large amount of food

I usually eat like a horse after I work hard all day.
eat one`s cake and have it too

- to use or spend something and still keep it, to have something both ways

The man refuses to give up anything and he always wants to eat his cake and have it too.
eat one's heart out

- to be envious of someone or something

I ate my heart out when I saw my friend and his new bicycle.
eat one`s words

- to take back something that one has said, to admit that something is not true

I told my boss that I would soon quit my job but later I had to eat my words and tell him that I wanted to stay.
eat out

- to eat a meal at a restaurant

My aunt and uncle eat out often at very nice restaurants.
eat out of (someone's) hands

- to do what someone else wants

The young secretary is always eating out of her bosses hands.
eat (someone) for breakfast

- to defeat someone easily

The young wrestler can eat the older wrestler for breakfast.
eat (someone) out of house and home

- to eat a lot of food in someone's house

The young boy is eating his parents out of house and home.
eat (something) up

- to enjoy/absorb/appreciate something

The students were eating up the comments by their professor.
egg (someone) on

- to encourage someone to do something (often something bad/wrong/dangerous)

The boys egged their friend on to jump into the water.
either feast or famine

- either too much or not enough of something

Either I have too much time or too little time. It is either feast or famine..
everything from soup to nuts

- almost everything that one can think of

We brought everything from soup to nuts for our weekend holiday.
eyes are bigger than one's stomach

- the amount of food that one takes is greater than what one could possibly eat

My eyes were bigger than my stomach and I took too much food at the buffet dinner.
fat is in the fire

- a situation is bad or a person has serious problems

The fat is in the fire now that the deadline is fast approaching for the court case.
feed one's face

- to eat

I stopped at a small restaurant after the game to feed my face.
fine kettle of fish

- a mess, an unsatisfactory situation

It was a fine kettle of fish that I was in when I lost the keys to my apartment.
food for thought

- something to think about

The advice from the bank manager was food for thought when I made my financial plan. for peanuts

- for very little money, for almost nothing

I was able to buy a used computer for peanuts.
forbidden fruit

- something that one finds attractive partly because it is illegal/immoral/prohibited

Entering the old building was forbidden fruit for the young boys.

fruits of one's labor

- the results of one's work

My father is retired now and he is finally enjoying the fruits of his labor.
full of beans

- to feel energetic, to be in high spirits

My aunt is full of beans tonight and she does not want to stop talking.
get oneself into a stew over (someone or something)

- to be worried or upset about someone or something

I try hard not to get myself into a stew over some of the rude remarks of my supervisor.
go bananas

- to become highly excited, to behave in a crazy way

The boy's girlfriend went bananas when he forgot to buy her a birthday present.
go/turn beet-red

- to become red in the face because you are embarrassed

The girl turned beet-red when her friend asked her about her boyfriend.
go on a binge

- to eat/do too much of something

My friend went on a binge and ate too much chocolate recently.
good egg

- a good person

The man is a good egg and everybody likes him a lot.
(one's) goose is cooked

- one has been found out and is now in trouble

I told a lie to my company and now my goose is cooked and I am in much trouble.
grab a bite to eat

- to get/have something to eat (usually quickly)

I will grab a bite to eat after the game today.
gravy train

- a job or some work that pays more than it is worth

For many years my father's job was a gravy train but now the company has become very strict about paying extra money.
greatest thing since sliced bread

- the greatest thing that there has ever been

My mother believes that the microwave oven is the greatest thing since sliced bread.
grist for the mill

- something that can be used to bring advantage or profit

The information that we got on the Internet was grist for the mill of our company's operations.
half a loaf is better than none

- a proverb that says that having part of something is better than having nothing at all

Half a loaf is better than none and I would rather work part-time than have no job at all.
half-baked

- to be not thought about or studied carefully

Our friend has a half-baked idea about starting a new business but most of us think that it will fail.
hand (something) to (someone) on a silver platter

- to give a person something that has not been earned

The father handed everything to the boy on a silver platter and now he is very spoiled and selfish.
hard nut to crack

- a difficult person or thing to deal with

My friend is a very serious person and she is a very hard nut to crack.
have a lot on one's plate

- to have a lot of things to do or deal with

I have a lot on my plate this week and I am very, very busy.
have a pick-me-up

- to eat or drink something stimulating

I wanted to have a pick-me-up so I stopped at a small shop for a coffee.
have a sweet tooth

- to have a desire to eat sweet foods

I have a sweet tooth and I love chocolate bars.
have a taste for (something)

- to have a desire for a food/drink/experience

The opera singer has always had a taste for classical music.
have bigger fish to fry

- to have other more important things to do

I have bigger fish to fry and I do not want to spend every evening doing extra work for my company.
have egg on one`s face

- to be embarrassed (because of an obvious error)

The man has egg on his face now that he has admitted that he was wrong about his boss.
have one's cake and eat it too

- to use or spend something and still keep it, to have something both ways

I wanted to have my cake and eat it too when I wanted more holidays and more responsibility at work.
have one's finger in the pie

- to be involved in something

The man has his finger in the pie of everything at his workplace.
have one's finger in too many pies

- to be involved in too many things so that you cannot do any of them well

Our supervisor has her finger in too many pies to really do her job well.
Here's mud in your eye!

- Drink up! (a drinking toast)

"Here's mud in your eye," I said as we drank a toast to my new job.
hit the sauce

- to drink alcohol (usually regularly)

I think that the woman began to hit the sauce after her husband lost his job.
hot potato

- a question or argument that is controversial and difficult to settle

The issue of building the nuclear power plant is a hot potato for the local town council.
icing on the cake

- something that makes a good situation or activity even better

I was able to find a good job and the fact that I can work where I want is the icing on the cake.
in a nutshell

- briefly, in a few words

We went to the meeting and they told us in a nutshell about the plans for our company.
in a pickle

- to be in trouble, to be in a mess

The boy was in a pickle when he lost the keys to the school cupboard.
in a stew about/over (someone or something)

- to be worried or upset about someone or something

My father is in a stew over the fact that his order of car parts has not arrived.
in one's salad days

- to be in one's youth

My aunt was a beautiful woman in her salad days.
in the soup

- in serious trouble, in a bad situation

The woman is in the soup now. She told her boss that she was sick but he saw her downtown shopping.
kill the fatted calf

- to prepare an elaborate banquet in honor of someone

We killed the fatted calf for my cousin when she returned from her trip abroad.
know which side one's bread is buttered

- to know what is most advantageous for you

My aunt knows which side her bread is buttered when she visits her sister.
lay an egg

- to give a bad performance of something

The singer laid an egg during her performance last evening.
life is a bowl of cherries

- only good things happen in life

Ever since my father retired from his job he has believed that life is a bowl of cherries.
like taking candy from a baby

- something is very easy to do

I asked the department store to refund the money for my goods and they quickly agreed. It was like taking candy from a baby.
like two peas in a pod

- to be very close or intimate with someone

The sisters are like two peas in a pod and they do everything together.
live high off/on the hog

- to live well and eat good food

The woman is able to live high on the hog when she goes away on a business trip.
live off the fat of the land

- to grow one's own food, to live on the resources of the land

The family is able to live off the fat of the land on their small farm.
make a meal of (something)

- to eat enough/much of one kind of food for one meal

We made a meal of the fish that we caught in the lake.
make mincemeat/hamburger out of (someone or something)

- to beat up or destroy someone or something

The older boxer made mincemeat out of the young boxer.
make one`s mouth water

- to make someone hungry, to make someone want to eat or drink something very much

The restaurant is wonderful and when I see the menu it makes my mouth water.
make (someone) eat crow

- to cause someone to admit an error or retract a statement

We made our boss eat crow when we discovered the mistake that he made with our work schedule.
meal ticket

- a thing or person that someone uses to get the money that they need to live

The woman's nursing degree is her meal ticket to a flexible and good life.
meat and potatoes

- basic simple and good food, simple tastes

The man is a meat-and-potatoes person who enjoys the simple pleasures of life.
melt in one's mouth

- to taste very good

The pastry melted in my mouth.
milk of human kindness

- the natural kindness and sympathy that is shown to others

The woman at the community center is full of the milk of human kindness.
milk (someone) for (something)

- to pressure someone into giving information or money

The man was trying to milk the elderly lady for much of her money.
neither fish nor fowl

- not in any recognizable category

The movie was neither fish nor fowl and I did not know what category to put it into.
not for all the tea in China

- not for anything

I will not for all the tea in China lend my friend any more money.
not know beans about (someone or something)

- to know nothing about someone or something

I do not know beans about repairing a car.
not worth a hill of beans

- worthless

The man is a liar and what he says is not worth a hill of beans.
on a diet

- to be trying to lose weight by eating less food

I have been on a diet for two months now.
one man's meat is another man's poison

- something that one person likes may be disliked by someone else

One man's meat is another man's poison and while my friend hates coffee, I love it.
out of the frying pan and into the fire

- to go from something bad to something worse

The woman jumped out of the frying pan and into the fire when she quit her job. Now her problems are much worse. out to lunch

- to be crazy, to be uninformed

The woman is out to lunch and you should never believe what she tells you.
out to lunch

- to be eating lunch away from one's work

The bank manager was out to lunch when I went to see him at the bank.
packed in like sardines

- to be packed in very tightly

The commuters were packed in like sardines in the subway car.
pie in the sky

- an idea or plan that you think will never happen

My cousin's plans are usually pie in the sky and will never happen.
piece of cake

- a task that is easily accomplished

The small job was a piece of cake. I had everything done before lunch this morning.
polish the apple

- to flatter someone

Nobody likes the girl because she is always trying to polish the apple with her teacher.
put all one's eggs in one basket

- to risk everything at once

I do not want to put all my eggs in one basket and only invest money in real estate.
put on the feed bag

- to eat a meal (like a horse would)

We put on the feed bag immediately after we got home.
put weight on

- to gain weight

The basketball player is putting weight on now.
rotten to the core

- to be completely worthless (like a rotten apple)

The political organization was rotten to the core and everybody knew that they must change.
rub salt in (someone's) wound

- to try to make someone's unhappiness or misfortune worse

I did not mention the car accident to my friend because I did not want to rub salt in his wound.
salt of the earth

- good/basic/honest/ordinary people

Our new neighbors are the salt of the earth. They are good, basic, honest people.
salt (something) away

- to save money or some other item

I am salting away much money from my new job.
save (someone's) bacon

- something helps you from failing or having trouble

My friend at work saved my bacon when he came to help me with the job that I could not do.
sell like hotcakes

- to sell quickly or easily

The new CD has only been released for one week but already it is selling like hotcakes.
sink one's teeth into (something)

- to take a bite of some kind of food, to get really involved in something

I am trying hard to sink my teeth into the project at work.
slice of the cake/pie

- a share of something

The government wants a slice of the cake of the money from the new casinos.
small potatoes

- something that is not very big or important compared with other things or people

The amount of money for the stadium is small potatoes compared to the total cost of the Olympics.
so clean you can eat off the floor

- very clean

My mother's kitchen is so clean you can eat off the floor.
soup up (something)

- to make something faster or more powerful by changing or adding something (this expression is often used for a car)

My neighbor decided to soup up the car that he recently bought.
spill the beans

- to tell a secret to someone who is not supposed to know about it

"Please do not spill the beans about my plans to quit work and return to school next year."
spoon-feed (someone)

- to help or care for someone too much when you are trying to teach him or her something

We had to spoon-feed the new employee when we were teaching him about the new computer system.
square meal

- a good filling meal

I was very busy at work last week and I did not have time for a square meal until Saturday.
stew in one`s own juice

- to suffer from something that you yourself have caused to happen

The man is the one who caused the problem for himself and he is now being forced to stew in his own juice.
stick to one's ribs

- to last a long time and to fill one up (used for food)

The meal that my grandmother made stuck to my ribs.
take (something) with a grain of salt

- to accept or believe something with much doubt, to not give much credit or importance to something that was said

"You should take everything that the supervisor says with a grain of salt because he likes to exaggerate things."
take the cake

- to be the best or worst of something

The behavior of the young girl takes the cake. It is terrible.
teach one's grandmother to suck eggs

- to try to tell someone who has more knowledge than you how to do something

I tried to teach my friend something about computers but he is a computer expert. It was like teaching my grandmother to suck eggs.
teething problems

- difficulties/problems that happen in the early stages of a project/activity

The new project which we were trying to start had many teething problems.
that's the way the cookie crumbles

- that's life, those things happen

That's the way the cookie crumbles, I thought when I learned that I would not get the new job.
there is no such thing as a free lunch

- you cannot get something without working for it or paying for it

There is no such thing as a free lunch and you must work hard if you want to get something in life.
too many cooks spoil the broth/stew

- too many people trying to do something will cause problems

Too many cooks spoil the broth and we decided to have less people work on the project because having too many people was making it difficult to do anything.
top banana

- the person who is the boss or the top person in a group or organization

The famous actor in the movie was the top banana in the story.
toss a salad

- to mix a salad with the dressing

I quickly tossed a salad and we ate dinner.
tub of lard

- a fat person

The young boys always call the chubby boy a tub of lard.
tuck into (something)

- to eat something with energy and enjoyment

We tucked into our dinner as soon as we sat down at the table.
upset the applecart

- to ruin a plan or event by surprise or accident

Everything was going well at the company picnic until our boss arrived and upset the applecart.
variety is the spice of life

- differences and changes make life interesting

Variety is the spice of life and I enjoy doing different things in my free time.
walk on eggs

- to be very cautious

I must walk on eggs when I ask my friend to do something for me.
what's good/sauce for the goose is good/sauce for the gander

- what is good for one person should be good for another person as well

"What's good for the goose is good for the gander and you should not ask your child to take the cough medicine if you will not take it yourself."
whet (someone's) appetite

- to cause someone to be interested in something and want to learn more about it

The introduction to playing a musical instrument helped to whet my appetite to learn more about music.
whole enchilada

- everything, all of something

I decided to buy the whole enchilada when I looked at the set of dishes and kitchen goods.
wine and dine (someone)

- to treat someone to an expensive meal, to entertain someone in a lavish manner

My uncle often has to wine and dine his important business clients.
worth one`s salt

- to be a good worker, to be worth what one is paid

The man has only been working here for a month but quickly he is proving that he is worth his salt.
you can't make an omelette without breaking the eggs

- you cannot do something without causing some problems or having some effects

"You can't make an omelette without breaking the eggs and if you want to change the work schedules, then you are going to cause problems."


apple Idioms
apple of (someone`s) eye

- someone or something that one likes a lot

The little girl is the apple of her grandfather`s eye.
as easy as apple pie

- very easy

The test that I wrote yesterday was as easy as apple pie.
bad/rotten apple

- a bad person

The boy is a bad apple and he is always in some kind of trouble.
compare apples and oranges

- to compare two things that are not similar and should not be compared

It was like comparing apples and oranges when we compared our new boss to our old one.
polish the apple

- to flatter someone

Nobody likes the girl because she is always trying to polish the apple with her teacher.
rotten to the core

- to be completely worthless (like a rotten apple)

The political organization was rotten to the core and everybody knew that they must change.
upset the applecart

- to ruin a plan or event by surprise or accident

Everything was going well at the company picnic until our boss arrived and upset the applecart.
bean Idioms
full of beans

- to feel energetic, to be in high spirits

My aunt is full of beans tonight and she does not want to stop talking.
not know beans about (someone or something)

- to know nothing about someone or something

I do not know beans about repairing a car.
not worth a hill of beans

- worthless

The man is a liar and what he says is not worth a hill of beans.
spill the beans

- to tell a secret to someone who is not supposed to know about it

"Please do not spill the beans about my plans to quit work and return to school next year."
bread Idioms
as warm as toast

- very warm and cozy

Our house was as warm as toast when we went in from the rain.
bread and butter

- one's income/job to buy the basic needs of life like food/shelter/clothing

The voters are worried about bread-and-butter issues like jobs and taxes.
bread and water

- the most basic meal that is possible (just as you would get in prison)

The prisoners were fed bread and water for several days last winter.
greatest thing since sliced bread

- the greatest thing that there has ever been

My mother believes that the microwave oven is the greatest thing since sliced bread.
grist for the mill

- something that can be used to bring advantage or profit

The information that we got on the Internet was grist for the mill of our company's operations.
half a loaf is better than none

- a proverb that says that having part of something is better than having nothing at all

Half a loaf is better than none and I would rather work part-time than have no job at all.
half-baked

- to be not thought about or studied carefully

Our friend has a half-baked idea about starting a new business but most of us think that it will fail.
know which side one's bread is buttered

- to know what is most advantageous for you

My aunt knows which side her bread is buttered when she visits her sister.
cake Idioms
eat one`s cake and have it too

- to use or spend something and still keep it, to have something both ways

The man refuses to give up anything and he always wants to eat his cake and have it too.
have one's cake and eat it too

- to use or spend something and still keep it, to have something both ways

I wanted to have my cake and eat it too when I wanted more holidays and more responsibility at work.
icing on the cake

- something that makes a good situation or activity even better

I was able to find a good job and the fact that I can work where I want is the icing on the cake.
piece of cake

- a task that is easily accomplished

The small job was a piece of cake. I had everything done before lunch this morning.
a slice of the cake

- a share of something

The government wants a slice of the cake of the money from the new casinos.
take the cake

- to be the best or worst of something

The behavior of the young girl takes the cake. It is terrible.
cooking Idioms
as black as a skillet

- very black

The bottom of the little boy's feet were as black as a skillet.
burn (something) to a crisp

- to burn something very badly

I burned the eggs to a crisp when I left the stove on while I was talking on the telephone.
cook (someone's) goose

- to damage or ruin someone

I think that I cooked my goose when I made a mistake at work today.
cook (something) to perfection

- to cook something perfectly

The chef always cooks the food to perfection at the small restaurant.
cook (something) up

- to cook something, to make some kind of plan

I do not know what my girlfriend is cooking up for the weekend but we will probably do something interesting.
done to a T/turn

- to be cooked just right (just as one would cook a steak perfectly)

The steaks were done to a T when my friend cooked them on the barbecue.
(one's) goose is cooked

- one has been found out and is now in trouble

I told a lie to my company and now my goose is cooked and I am in much trouble.
out of the frying pan and into the fire

- to go from something bad to something worse

The woman jumped out of the frying pan and into the fire when she quit her job. Now her problems are much worse.
too many cooks spoil the broth

- too many people trying to do something will cause problems

Too many cooks spoil the broth and we decided to have less people work on the project because having too many people was making it difficult to do anything.
toss a salad

- to mix a salad with the dressing

I quickly tossed a salad and we ate dinner.
drink Idioms
Bottoms up!

- everybody should drink now (this expression is used at the end of a drinking toast)

"Bottoms up," our host said at the beginning of the dinner.
coffee break

- a break from work to rest and drink coffee/tea

We usually have a coffee break every morning at 10 o`clock.
cry over spilled/spilt milk

- to cry or complain about something that has already happened

You should not cry over spilled milk. The past is past and you cannot do anything to change it.
(not one's) cup of tea

- something that one does not enjoy or do well (usually used in the negative)

Going to art galleries is not my cup of tea so I think that I will stay home this evening.
down the hatch

- something is swallowed

My drink was down the hatch before I could order another one.
have a pick-me-up

- to eat or drink something stimulating

I wanted to have a pick-me-up so I stopped at a small shop for a coffee.
Here's mud in your eye!

- Drink up! (a drinking toast)

"Here's mud in your eye," I said as we drank a toast to my new job.
hit the sauce

- to drink alcohol (usually regularly)

I think that the woman began to hit the sauce after her husband lost his job.
milk of human kindness

- the natural kindness and sympathy that is shown to others

The woman at the community center is full of the milk of human kindness.
milk (someone) for (something)

- to pressure someone into giving information or money

The man was trying to milk the elderly lady for much of her money.
not for all the tea in China

- not for anything

I will not for all the tea in China lend my friend any more money.
wine and dine (someone)

- to treat someone to an expensive meal, to entertain someone in a lavish manner

My uncle often has to wine and dine his important business clients.
eating Idioms
acquire a taste for something

- to develop a liking for some kind of food or drink or something

My friend has recently acquired a taste for classical music.
as hungry as a bear

- very hungry

I was as hungry as a bear when I returned home from work yesterday.
at one sitting

- at one time, during one period

We ate most of the cake at one sitting.
binge and purge

- to overeat and then to vomit

The young woman had eating problems and she would often binge and purge her food.
bite off more than one can chew

- to try to do or eat more than you can manage

I bit off more than I could chew when I began to work at the store in the evening.
bite the hand that feeds one

- to harm someone who does good things for you

I do not want to make my company angry because I do not want to bite the hand that feeds me.
bitter pill to swallow

- something unpleasant that one must accept

It was a bitter pill to swallow when I learned that I would not get the job that I thought I would.
can't stomach (someone or something)

- to dislike or hate someone or something

I can't stomach the idea of meeting my old girlfriend.
clear the table

- to remove the dishes and other eating utensils from a table after eating

We had to clear the table before we could eat our dessert.
Come and get it!

- Dinner is ready. Come and eat.

"Come and get it," my mother called after she made dinner.
eat and run

- to eat a meal and then quickly leave

I had to eat and run in order to be on time for my evening class.
eat crow

- to admit that one is mistaken or defeated, to take back a mistaken statement

I was forced to eat crow and apologize for the things that I had said about my co-worker.
eat dirt

- to act humble, to accept another person's insults or bad treatment

We made the boy eat dirt after he accused us of lying.
eat high on/off the hog

- to eat expensive and high quality food

My uncle has been eating high on the hog since he got his new job.
eat humble pie

- to be humbled, to admit one`s error and apologize

Our boss was forced to eat humble pie after he made the wrong budget estimate for next year.
eat like a bird

- to eat only a small amount of food

The girl eats like a bird and is very slim.
eat like a horse

- to eat a large amount of food

I usually eat like a horse after I work hard all day.
eat one`s cake and have it too

- to use or spend something and still keep it, to have something both ways

The man refuses to give up anything and he always wants to eat his cake and have it too.
eat one's heart out

- to be envious of someone or something

I ate my heart out when I saw my friend and his new bicycle.
eat one`s words

- to take back something that one has said, to admit that something is not true

I told my boss that I would soon quit my job but later I had to eat my words and tell him that I wanted to stay.
eat out

- to eat a meal at a restaurant

My aunt and uncle eat out often at very nice restaurants.
eat out of (someone's) hands

- to do what someone else wants

The young secretary is always eating out of her bosses hands.
eat (someone) for breakfast

- to defeat someone easily

The young wrestler can eat the older wrestler for breakfast.
eat (someone) out of house and home

- to eat a lot of food in someone's house

The young boy is eating his parents out of house and home.
eat (something) up

- to enjoy/absorb/appreciate something

The students were eating up the comments by their professor.
either feast or famine

- either too much or not enough of something

Either I have too much time or too little time. It is either feast or famine..
eyes are bigger than one's stomach

- the amount of food that one takes is greater than what one could possibly eat

My eyes were bigger than my stomach and I took too much food at the buffet dinner.
feed one's face

- to eat

I stopped at a small restaurant after the game to feed my face.
go on a binge

- to eat/do too much of something

My friend went on a binge and ate too much chocolate recently.
grab a bite to eat

- to get/have something to eat (usually quickly)

I will grab a bite to eat after the game today.
have a lot on one's plate

- to have a lot of things to do or deal with

I have a lot on my plate this week and I am very, very busy.
have a sweet tooth

- to have a desire to eat sweet foods

I have a sweet tooth and I love chocolate bars.
have a taste for (something)

- to have a desire for a food/drink/experience

The opera singer has always had a taste for classical music.
have one's cake and eat it too

- to use or spend something and still keep it, to have something both ways

I wanted to have my cake and eat it too when I wanted more holidays and more responsibility at work.
make a meal of (something)

- to eat enough/much of one kind of food for one meal

We made a meal of the fish that we caught in the lake.
make one`s mouth water

- to make someone hungry, to make someone want to eat or drink something very much

The restaurant is wonderful and when I see the menu it makes my mouth water.
make (someone) eat crow

- to cause someone to admit an error or retract a statement

We made our boss eat crow when we discovered the mistake that he made with our work schedule.
meal ticket

- a thing or person that someone uses to get the money that they need to live

The woman's nursing degree is her meal ticket to a flexible and good life.
melt in one's mouth

- to taste very good

The pastry melted in my mouth.
on a diet

- to be trying to lose weight by eating less food

I have been on a diet for two months now.
out to lunch

- to be crazy, to be uninformed

The woman is out to lunch and you should never believe what she tells you.
out to lunch

- to be eating lunch away from one's work

The bank manager was out to lunch when I went to see him at the bank.
put on the feed bag

- to eat a meal (like a horse would)

We put on the feed bag immediately after we got home.
put weight on

- to gain weight

The basketball player is putting weight on now.
sink one's teeth into (something)

- to take a bite of some kind of food, to get really involved in something

I am trying hard to sink my teeth into the project at work.
spoon-feed (someone)

- to help or care for someone too much when you are trying to teach him or her something

We had to spoon-feed the new employee when we were teaching him about the new computer system.
square meal

- a good filling meal

I was very busy at work last week and I did not have time for a square meal until Saturday.
stick to one's ribs

- to last a long time and to fill one up (used for food)

The meal that my grandmother made stuck to my ribs.
there is no such thing as a free lunch

- you cannot get something without working for it or paying for it

There is no such thing as a free lunch and you must work hard if you want to get something in life.
tuck into (something)

- to eat something with energy and enjoyment

We tucked into our dinner as soon as we sat down at the table.
whet (someone's) appetite

- to cause someone to be interested in something and want to learn more about it

The introduction to playing a musical instrument helped to whet my appetite to learn more about music.
egg Idioms
bad egg

- a bad person, a bum

My neighbor is a bad egg and you should avoid him if you can.
egg (someone) on

- to encourage someone to do something (often something bad/wrong/dangerous)

The boys egged their friend on to jump into the water.
good egg

- a good person

The man is a good egg and everybody likes him a lot.
have egg on one`s face

- to be embarrassed (because of an obvious error)

The man has egg on his face now that he has admitted that he was wrong about his boss.
lay an egg

- to give a bad performance of something

The singer laid an egg during her performance last evening.
put all one's eggs in one basket

- to risk everything at once

I do not want to put all my eggs in one basket and only invest money in real estate.
teach one's grandmother to suck eggs

- to try to tell someone who has more knowledge than you how to do something

I tried to teach my friend something about computers but he is a computer expert. It was like teaching my grandmother to suck eggs.
walk on eggs

- to be very cautious

I must walk on eggs when I ask my friend to do something for me.
you can't make an omelette without breaking the eggs

- you cannot do something without causing some problems or having some effects

"You can't make an omelette without breaking the eggs and if you want to change the work schedules, then you are going to cause problems."
fish Idioms
fine kettle of fish

- a mess, an unsatisfactory situation

It was a fine kettle of fish that I was in when I lost the keys to my apartment.
have bigger fish to fry

- to have other more important things to do

I have bigger fish to fry and I do not want to spend every evening doing extra work for my company.
neither fish nor fowl

- not in any recognizable category

The movie was neither fish nor fowl and I did not know what category to put it into.
packed in like sardines

- to be packed in very tightly

The commuters were packed in like sardines in the subway car.
fruit Idioms
as nutty as a fruitcake

- silly, crazy

The man in the supermarket was as nutty as a fruitcake.
bear fruit

- to yield or give results

The woman's hard work at her business finally began to bear fruit when she started to make money.
forbidden fruit

- something that one finds attractive partly because it is illegal/immoral/prohibited

Entering the old building was forbidden fruit for the young boys.

fruits of one's labor

- the results of one's work

My father is retired now and he is finally enjoying the fruits of his labor.
nut Idioms
everything from soup to nuts

- almost everything that one can think of

We brought everything from soup to nuts for our weekend holiday.
for peanuts

- for very little money, for almost nothing

I was able to buy a used computer for peanuts.
hard nut to crack

- a difficult person or thing to deal with

My friend is a very serious person and she is a very hard nut to crack.
in a nutshell

- briefly, in a few words

We went to the meeting and they told us in a nutshell about the plans for our company.
pie Idioms
as easy as apple pie

- very easy

The test that I wrote yesterday was as easy as apple pie.
eat humble pie

- to be humbled, to admit one`s error and apologize

Our boss was forced to eat humble pie after he made the wrong budget estimate for next year.
have one's finger in the pie

- to be involved in something

The man has his finger in the pie of everything at his workplace.
have one's finger in too many pies

- to be involved in too many things so that you cannot do any of them well

Our supervisor has her finger in too many pies to really do her job well.
pie in the sky

- an idea or plan that you think will never happen

My cousin's plans are usually pie in the sky and will never happen.
slice of the pie

- a share of something

The government wants a slice of the pie of the money from the new casinos.
potato Idioms
couch potato

- someone who spends a lot of time on a couch watching television

My cousin is a couch potato and he never wants to leave his house.
drop (someone/something) like a hot potato

- to suddenly stop being involved with someone or with some kind of a problem

The advertisers dropped the basketball star like a hot potato when he became involved in a scandal.
hot potato

- a question or argument that is controversial and difficult to settle

The issue of building the nuclear power plant is a hot potato for the local town council.
meat and potatoes

- basic simple and good food, simple tastes

The man is a meat-and-potatoes person who enjoys the simple pleasures of life.
small potatoes

- something that is not very big or important compared with other things or people

The amount of money for the stadium is small potatoes compared to the total cost of the Olympics.
salt Idioms
back to the salt mines

- to go back to work (this is a humorous expression to express going back to unpleasant work)

"Lunch is over so let`s go back to the salt mines for the afternoon."
rub salt in (someone's) wound

- to try to make someone's unhappiness or misfortune worse

I did not mention the car accident to my friend because I did not want to rub salt in his wound.
salt of the earth

- good/basic/honest/ordinary people

Our new neighbors are the salt of the earth. They are good, basic, honest people.
salt (something) away

- to save money or some other item

I am salting away much money from my new job.
take (something) with a grain of salt

- to accept or believe something with much doubt, to not give much credit or importance to something that was said

"You should take everything that the supervisor says with a grain of salt because he likes to exaggerate things."
worth one`s salt

- to be a good worker, to be worth what one is paid

The man has only been working here for a month but quickly he is proving that he is worth his salt.
soup Idioms
as easy as duck soup

- very easy

It was as easy as duck soup to find the book that I wanted in the library.
as thick as pea soup

- very thick (can be used with fog as well as with liquids)

The fog was as thick as pea soup when we walked along the beach.
duck soup

- a task that does not require much effort

"It was like duck soup. I was able to finish my school project last night."
everything from soup to nuts

- almost everything that one can think of

We brought everything from soup to nuts for our weekend holiday.
in the soup

- in serious trouble, in a bad situation

The woman is in the soup now. She told her boss that she was sick but he saw her downtown shopping.
soup up (something)

- to make something faster or more powerful by changing or adding something (this expression is often used for a car)

My neighbor decided to soup up the car that he recently bought.
too many cooks spoil the broth

- too many people trying to do something will cause problems

Too many cooks spoil the broth and we decided to have less people work on the project because having too many people was making it difficult to do anything.
stew Idioms
get oneself into a stew over (someone or something)

- to be worried or upset about someone or something

I try hard not to get myself into a stew over some of the rude remarks of my supervisor.
in a stew about/over (someone or something)

- to be worried or upset about someone or something

My father is in a stew over the fact that his order of car parts has not arrived.
stew in one`s own juice

- to suffer from something that you yourself have caused to happen

The man is the one who caused the problem for himself and he is now being forced to stew in his own juice.
too many cooks spoil the stew

- too many people trying to do something will cause problems

Too many cooks spoil the broth and we decided to have less people work on the project because having too many people was making it difficult to do anything.