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Monthly Archives: July 2012

Are you a doubting Thomas ?

A doubting Thomas: a person who refuses to believe anything until they are given proof

 

 The term is based on the Biblical account of Thomas the Apostle, a disciple of Jesus who doubted Jesus’resurrection and demanded to feel Jesus’ wounds before being convinced. After seeing Jesus alive and being offered the opportunity to touch his wounds, according to the author of the Gospel of John, Thomas then professed his faith in Jesus. For this reason he is also called Thomas the Believer.

Example: I told Kim that the tickets had been found, but being a doubting Thomas, she wouldn’t believe me until she saw them.

 
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Posted by on July 11, 2012 in IDIOMS

 

A chip on your shoulder!

A chip on your shoulder: Being upset for something that happened in the past. 

The origins for this phrase appears to be from the early 19th century, where a particular group of people that were looking for a physical fight would literally place a chip of wood on their shoulders and walk around, daring others to knock it off. Anyone who wanted to accept the proposed challenge could do so by knocking the chip off the person’s shoulders.

Example: Why are you still mad at me, Tim? There’s no need to have a chip on your shoulder for something that happened weeks ago, I thought we were past this.

 

 
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Posted by on July 11, 2012 in IDIOMS

 

Do you smell a rat?

To smell a rat: to believe something is wrong 

Example: When my husband started working late three or four times a week, I smelled a rat.

The origin is as follows: when a dog gets excited it might be as it has found or smelt a rat… rat hunting dogs often were allowed to go where they liked in a house to find and kill the rats… and when the dog got excited it was probably due to that dodgy smell of a rat, and so anything that rouses suspicion got this moniker.

 
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Posted by on July 9, 2012 in IDIOMS

 

What are idioms???

An idiom is a word or phrase which means something different from what it says – it is usually a metaphor. Idioms are common phrases or terms whose meaning is not real, but can be understood by their popular use.

Because idioms can mean something different from what the words mean, it is difficult for someone not very good at speaking the language to use them properly. Some idioms are only used by some groups of people or at certain times.

The idiom shape up or ship out, which is like saying improve your behavior or leave if you don’t, might be said by an employer or supervisor to an employee, but not to other people.

Idioms are not the same thing as slang. Idioms are made of normal words that have a special meaning known by almost everyone. Slang is usually special words that are known only by a particular group.

To learn a language a person needs to learn the words in that language, and how and when to use them. But people also need to learn idioms separately because certain words together or at certain times can have different meanings. In order to understand an idiom, one sometimes needs to know the culture the idiom comes from.

To know the history of an idiom can be useful and interesting, but is not necessary to be able to use the idiom properly. For example most native British English speakers know that “No room to swing a cat” means “there was not a lot of space” and can use the idiom properly, but few know it is because 200 years ago sailors were punished by being whipped with a whip called a “cat o’nine tails”. A big space was cleared on the ship so that the person doing the whipping had a lot of room to swing the cat.

A better understanding of an idiom is that it is a phrase whose meaning cannot be understood from the dictionary definitions of each word taken separately.

 
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Posted by on July 9, 2012 in IDIOMS

 

Welcome readers!

Hi readers,

welcome to my blog making English easy. We all know that English is an international language and having a good hold over the language enables us to communicate better with people in any part of the world. So let’s make sure that we learn the nitty-gritty of the language so that we can enhance our knowledge. Learning English is fun. So let’s have some fun here sharing our knowledge of the English language. 

We would be discussing about idioms, proverbs, confusing words, and other things which people tend to overlook in their day to day lives.

Check out the posts in the various categories like : idioms, homonyms,proverbs and many more to come. keep watching this space for more

So let’s have some fun 🙂

 
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Posted by on July 9, 2012 in WELCOME

 
 
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