... Burning question Dorking School of English, Bangkok Thailand www.dk -english. com Page 1 Dictionary ofEnglishIdioms and Idiomatic Expressions By Dorking School ofEnglish ~ A ~ A bit much If ... Dorking School of English, Bangkok Thailand www.dk -english. com Page 20Death of a thousand cuts If something is suffering the death of a thousand cuts, or death by a thousand cuts, lots of small ... spend most of their leisure time horizontal in front of the TV and eats a diet that is mainly junk food. Dorking School of English, Bangkok Thailand www.dk -english. com Page 44Labour of love...
... Someone who's full of piss and vinegar is full of youthful energy. Full of the joys of spring If you are full of the joys of spring, you are very happy and full of energy. Full swing If ... literature, and often a writer too. Man of means A man, or woman, of means is wealthy. Man of parts A man of parts is a person who is talented in a number of different areas or ways. Man of straw ... Dorking School of English, Bangkok Thailand www.dk -english. com Page 5At the drop of a hat If you would do something at the drop of a hat, you'd do it immediately. At the end of the day...
... out of a situation, no matter how unpleasant, difficult or even painful it might seem. Idioms 1 of 49 Dictionary ofEnglishIdioms & Idiomatic Expressions Dictionary ofEnglishIdioms ... talk of the town. Talk out of the back of your head 9 If someone is talking out of the back of their head, they are talking rubbish. Talk out of your hat 9 If someone is talking out of their ... a lot of money. Make a monkey of someone 9 Idioms 11 of 49 A couch potato is an extremely idle or lazy person who chooses to spend most of their leisure time horizontal in front of the...
... completion. Fall off the back of a lorry (UK) If someone tries to sell you something that has fallen of the back of a lorry, they are trying to sell you stolen goods. Fall off the turnip truck ... out of the woodwork When things come out of the woodwork, they appear unexpectedly. ('Crawl out of the woodwork' is also used.) Come out of your shell If someone comes out of their ... done'. At the end of your rope (USA) If you are at the end of your rope, you are at the limit of your patience or endurance. At the end of your tether (UK) If you are at the end of your tether,...
... dictionary. 1 IntroductionThe goal of the project is to enhance the database of the Oxford DictionaryofEnglish (a forthcomingnew edition of the 1998 New Oxford Dictionary of English) so that it contains ... richness of a largenatural-language dictionary in providing cues andflagging exceptions. The stylistic regularity of a dictionary like ODE supports the enumeration of afinite (albeit large) list of ... that ex-amination of the content of a sense can do no morethan build up lists of candidate collocates — anumber of which will be genuinely high-scoringcollocates, but others of which may be...
... dis-tinguished from a consensus of authority, of evidence, of faith, of taste, of testimony, and so on.In any case, “consensus of does notgo with “some kind of Mafia involve-ment” (in the third ... description of a market scene in Niger,a book of true adventure contains an ex-ample of the strict use of career:A man trying out a camel careered out of control, much to the amusement of the crowd.The ... reversal of thechronological order of events, often withafter, in an effort to update the news;and (2) use of condition in a specialsense, that of a medical prognosis, a prediction of a patient’s...
... single member of a particular group, which can comprisepeople, things, or animals. Often of fol-lows, as in “every one of our 1,500” and“each and every one of our clients.” The of and its object ... instead of became orwaxed enthusiastic, was disapproved by76 percent of The American Heritage Dictionary s usage panel. “He was con-siderably less enthused by signs of fac-tionalism,” instead of ... Perhaps the writer of the headline knew better and was try-ing to achieve some kind of effect, be-sides the effect of making the newspaperseem illiterate and causing hundreds of English teachers...
... rarekind of stone.”The same principle holds for class of, sort of, and type of. “A gnu is a type of antelope.”3. Properly used with A or ANKind of in another sense may go witha. Being a kind of ... fully. “She’s akind of butterfly.” / “George is a sort of expert.”The same goes for kind of a (or an) orsort of a (or an). “My boss is kind of atyrant.” / “They say Fred is sort of ananimal at ... call anaverage. It is the sum of a set of figures di-vided by the number of figures in the set.The definitions coincide only for a set of two figures. The mean of 56, 36, and34 is 42.A statistical...
... ending. See Plurals and singulars,2J. OF. See COMPRISE; HAVE, HAS,HAD, 2; OFF and “OFF OF ; ON, 3;Prepositions; SUPPORTIVE. OF ANY, OF ANYONE. See ANY,1, 2. OF COURSE. 1. Benefit. 2. Draw-back. ... been one of the mean-ings of over since the Middle Ages. TheOxford EnglishDictionary offers eightquotations, from the fourteenth centuryon, to illustrate that over can mean “Inexcess of, above, ... blow them out of the sky”(a non sequitur). “Little choice”? TheAmericans had the choice of not blowingthem out of the sky; the choice of talkinginstead of shooting; the choice of goinghome....
... thought.Their function of setting off part of asentence resembles that of dashes andparentheses. (See 4, 7.) In general, com-mas least interrupt the flow of the sen-tence.When the set-off matter comes ... donewithout unduly raising the price of coalor of jeopardizing new trade.” Omit thesecond of; no preposition belongs thereat all.See also ADVOCATE; FREE, 1; OFFand “OFF OF ; ON, 2; WHENCE and“FROM ... as thesubject of its verb (lives or comes).(See THAT and WHICH; WHO,THAT, and WHICH.)PROOF and EVIDENCE. See EVI-DENCE and PROOF.PROOF OF THE PUDDING. Theproverb about proof and pudding...
... ON, 1.)The derailment of a series ranks highamong the most common errors foundin print. The main cause of it is the fear of repetition, even the repetition of so in-offensive a word as and. ... saveby the lawful judgment of his peers orby the law of the land. . . . . . . For the sake of God, and forthe bettering of our realm, and for themore ready healing of the discordwhich has ... deprived of liberty without dueprocess of law.The sentence affirms a “right to be de-prived of liberty.” To invoke the Fifthand Fourteenth Amendments, insert notbefore “to be deprived.”A court of...