1. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Slip your mind
A. Forget about something
B. Immediately think of something
C. Can’t think of anything to say
D. Think about something for a short time
BY SHILPA MA’AM
2. Select the most appropriate idiom.
It feels like I made a promise of more than my ability when I promised to
complete this worksheet in one day.
A. beat my brain out
B. bit off more than I could chew
C. beat the drum
D. burnt a hole in my pocket
BY SHILPA MA’AM
3. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
On its last legs
A. Last choice
B. Creeping on legs
C. Slow movement
D. In a bad condition
BY SHILPA MA’AM
4. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Best thing since sliced bread
A. Something to be cautious about
B. Extremely good, interesting
C. Breaking news
D. Rated well amongst cooks
BY SHILPA MA’AM
5. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Around the clock
A. Something that is done within one hour
B. Something that is done at night
C. Something that is time bound
D. Something that goes on day and night
BY SHILPA MA’AM
6. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Have a bee in your bonnet
A. Unable to stay at a place for long
B. Having a cruel intention or grudge against someone
C. Be preoccupied or obsessed with something
D. To keep worrying about yourself
BY SHILPA MA’AM
7. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Stick to one’s guns
A. To shoot at
B. To remain faithful to
C. To become unfaithful to
D. To become a rebel
BY SHILPA MA’AM
8. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Last resort
A. Last friend remaining
B. Last ride
C. Last hotel on the way
D. Last course of action
BY SHILPA MA’AM
9. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Ace in the hole
A. A second chance to do something
B. On the point of
C. A hidden advantage
D. A lot to do
BY SHILPA MA’AM
10. Select the most appropriate idiom.
After a day long trek, we were so tired that we were ready to _________.
A. go from rags to riches
B. face the music
C. hit the sack
D. get into deep water
BY SHILPA MA’AM
11. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Black and white
A. Doubtful
B. In writing
C. A false invention
D. In dispute
BY SHILPA MA’AM
12. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Lose heart
A. To believe in your success
B. To get success by believing in yourself
C. To be suspicious of your success
D. To stop believing that you can succeed
BY SHILPA MA’AM
13. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Put in mind
A. To understand
B. To remind
C. To calculate
D. To forget
BY SHILPA MA’AM
14. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Dog eat dog
A. Being calculative
B. Tit for tat
C. Ruthlessly competitive
D. Like-minded people connect better
BY SHILPA MA’AM
15. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Blowing smoke
A. To tease someone relentlessly
B. To hide something
C. To burn something important
D. To lie to perplex others
BY SHILPA MA’AM
16. Select the most appropriate idiom.
The arrival of Pragati in the house brought disharmony among the family members
A. Rift in the lute
B. Hair breadth
C. Tenterhooks
D. A cry in the wilderness
BY SHILPA MA’AM
17. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Cost an arm and a leg
A. To be inexpensive
B. To be affordable
C. To be very expensive
D. To be moderately priced
BY SHILPA MA’AM
18. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
At one’s fingertips
A. To take revenge
B. Out of reach
C. To be unaware of something
D. To have complete knowledge
BY SHILPA MA’AM
19. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Teja followed his friend’s advice so now he is in deep water.
A. In dilemma
B. In trouble
C. In good position
D. In deep thoughts
BY SHILPA MA’AM
20. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
The realtors of the new venture sold plots like hot cakes
A. Sold illegally
B. Sold with great difficulty
C. Sold quickly and in large numbers
D. Sold innovatively
BY SHILPA MA’AM
21. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
The United Nations is working to eliminate the vicious cycle of poverty
A. Strength of something
B. Loophole of something
C. The barrier of poverty
D. One problem causes other
BY SHILPA MA’AM
22. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Where the shoe pinches
A. Difficult roads
B. Unknown paths
C. Where the shoe hurts
D. Where the difficulty lies
BY SHILPA MA’AM
23. Which of the following idioms means ‘going to sleep
A. Keep an ear to the ground
B. Hit the sack
C. Break new grounds
D. Run around in circles
BY SHILPA MA’AM
24. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Fish out of water
A. To die soon
B. No knowledge of marine life
C. To be out of place
D. Not good at swimming
BY SHILPA MA’AM
25. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Bells and whistles
A. To take on a difficult task
B. Attractive but unnecessary features added to products
C. An innovative development
D. At a serious disadvantage
BY SHILPA MA’AM
26. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Spill the beans
A. To leak a secret
B. To help someone extraordinarily
C. Cook the beans carefully
D. The act of loving beans
BY SHILPA MA’AM
27. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
When I got an opportunity to start a new business, Ravikanth queered my pitch.
A. Helped me by standing beside me
B. Advised me
C. Ruined my plan
D. Supported me with money
BY SHILPA MA’AM
28. Select the most appropriate idiom.
Last year art critics praised Animesh as if he were a master, but he turned out
to be a pleasure for a short time
A. a dish fit for Gods
B. a house of cards
C. a bull in a china shop
D. a nine days’ wonder
BY SHILPA MA’AM
29. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Bread and butter
A. An activity you do to get help others
B. An activity you do to get money for basic needs
C. An activity you do to improve your culinary skills
D. An activity you do with determination
BY SHILPA MA’AM
30. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Vishnu and Vignesh are always like two peas in a pod.
A. Very similar to each other
B. Smart and intelligent
C. Happy and compassionate
D. Good in every way
BY SHILPA MA’AM
31. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Bag and baggage
A. With all goods
B. By force
C. At the service
D. Fair and honest
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32. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
To be at daggers drawn
A. Ready to fight
B. To be under control
C. To be about to collapse
D. Under suspicion
BY SHILPA MA’AM
33. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
A bolt from the blue
A. A sudden and unexpected event
B. Raining heavily
C. A spontaneous but expected event
D. Thunder and rain in a strom
BY SHILPA MA’AM
34. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Walk a tightrope
A. To walk on a narrow road
B. To try and balance yourself
C. To act carefully in a difficult situation
D. To be tensed about something
BY SHILPA MA’AM
35. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
I can’t begin to talk on this situation right now; I am still wrapping my head
around it.
A. Revealing a secret nobody knows
B. Ignoring something completely
C. Comparing two things that can’t be compared
D. Understanding something complicated
BY SHILPA MA’AM
36. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
You can best identify the fair weather friends at the time of adversity.
A. Friends who bring good rain
B. Best friends
C. Friend only at the time of prosperity
D. Friends who come in good weather conditions
BY SHILPA MA’AM
37. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Prakash could not make up his mind about what to do with the project.
A. Decide
B. Abandon
C. Think
D. Abide
BY SHILPA MA’AM
38. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Independence Day is considered as a red-letter day in the history of India.
A. Regular day
B. Uneventful day
C. Memorable day
D. Unimportant day
BY SHILPA MA’AM
39. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Manish told Rounak time and again of the ill consequences of his habit of
being late to the college
A. Not often
B. At intervals
C. Repeatedly
D. Hardly ever
BY SHILPA MA’AM
40. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
A jack of all trades cannot survive in the world of specialisation
A. An expert of many jobs
B. A good communicator
C. A person who can do many things but is not an expert in any
D. A businessman
BY SHILPA MA’AM
41. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
After many years of rivalry, the two schools decided to _______ and participate
in a National Event together.
A. go cold turkey
B. bell the cat
C. be in the doldrums
D. bury the hatchet
BY SHILPA MA’AM
42. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Every piece of furniture in her house is in apple-pie order.
A. Very neatly arranged
B. Painted in light colours
C. Very delicately arranged
D. Kept in a disorganised way
BY SHILPA MA’AM
43. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
To throw dust in one’s eyes
A. To make someone blind forever
B. To hit someone with stone
C. To mislead someone by tricks
D. To talk in an abusive language
BY SHILPA MA’AM
44. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Out of the frying pan and into the fire
A. Being a horrible cook
B. Being with someone through good times as well as bad times
C. Things going from bad to worse
D. Things getting intense by the hour
BY SHILPA MA’AM
45. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
I know Covid has made you terribly ill, but the good thing is that you have
developed immunity against it for further infections.
A. being in the quicksilver
B. the silver spoon
C. the silver lining in the cloud
D. crossing palms with silver
BY SHILPA MA’AM
46. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Gift of the gab
A. Talent for speaking
B. Witty
C. Humorous
D. Talent for singing
BY SHILPA MA’AM
47. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
A sting in the tail
A. A situation in which a large group has to do something to satisfy a small group
B. To initiate a situation that is very complicated or problematic
C. An unexpected, typically unpleasant or problematic end to something
D. Something which seems bad at first but contains a pleasant part at the end
BY SHILPA MA’AM
48. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Going through a sticky patch
A. Try to paste something unsuccessfully
B. To feel sad
C. To walk on a muddy road
D. To experience a bad period in life
BY SHILPA MA’AM
49. Select the most appropriate idiom.
With the increasing market prices and stagnant salaries, he is _________.
A. beating the rap
B. feeling the pinch
C. getting it off his chest
D. taking a break
BY SHILPA MA’AM
50. Select the most appropriate idiom to fill the blank in the given situation.
They were waiting for their family members who were returning from a
pilgrimage. Therefore, they were _______________ on the platform
A. playing a joke
B. pacing up and down
C. running behind time
D. rolling up their sleeves
BY SHILPA MA’AM
51. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
To read between the lines
A. To read aloud
B. To grasp the hidden meaning
C. To read without concentration
D. To whisper
BY SHILPA MA’AM
52. Select the sentence that brings out the most appropriate meaning of the
idiom ‘Dog in the manger’
A. Mohit was so loyal and committed to his company that he rejected lucrative
offers from different companies.
B. To prove this is not a trap, I want to check the credibility of your plan.
C. Rachit had some important work and so he cancelled the show tickets for
everyone.
D. You are here just because you have recognised your hidden potential
BY SHILPA MA’AM
53. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
The technicians who were repairing the broken elevator called it a day.
A. Stopped to take a short break
B. Felt unhappy
C. Shouted with anger
D. Stopped work for the day
BY SHILPA MA’AM
54. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
He got medals time after time by following the instructions of his mentor.
A. Repeatedly
B. Rarely
C. Once
D. Twice
BY SHILPA MA’AM
55. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
A wild goose chase
A. Fruitful search
B. On a hunt
C. Fruitless search
D. Ideal seeking
BY SHILPA MA’AM
56. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
An old head on young shoulders
A. A person who is slow at understanding things.
B. A young person who acts or speaks like an older person.
C. A young person who looks old.
D. A young person who is lazy
BY SHILPA MA’AM
57. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
I will always stand by my friend
A. Be in a queue
B. Stand next to
C. Support in difficult situation
D. Work together
BY SHILPA MA’AM
58. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
At the drop of a hat
A. Consecutively
B. Eventually
C. Certainly
D. Immediately
BY SHILPA MA’AM
59. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Under the weather
A. To feel secure
B. To work against the weather
C. To enjoy the weather
D. To feel unwell
BY SHILPA MA’AM
60. Select the appropriate option that can substitute the underlined phrase
in the following sentence.
Even though she’s a celebrity, she doesn’t draw any attention towards herself
A. keeps a low profile
B. keeps hot under the collar
C. is hard to come by
D. keeps up with the Joneses
BY SHILPA MA’AM
61. Select the most appropriate idiom.
Sohan was very much perplexed to find that his younger brother Mohan had
taken poison
A. At any rate
B. At his wit’s end
C. At logger heads
D. At his disposal
BY SHILPA MA’AM
62. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Yeoman’s service
A. Excellent work done
B. A thankless and tedious job
C. Working under a cruel master
D. Fraudulent service
BY SHILPA MA’AM
63. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
The Government must strive to provide a fair and square deal to the citizen
of its country.
A. exclusive and unreal
B. honest and straightforward
C. violent and immoral
D. forward and backward
BY SHILPA MA’AM
64. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
By leaps and bounds
A. Unknowingly
B. Normally
C. Slowly
D. Rapidly
BY SHILPA MA’AM
65. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Skating on thin ice
A. They were on thin ice when they skated on the frozen lake.
B. She was on thin ice while trying to balance on a tightrope.
C. He was on thin ice after making a controversial statement.
D. They were on thin ice due to the icy conditions on the road
BY SHILPA MA’AM
66. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Be in seventh heaven
A. To be ignored
B. To start performing better
C. To be in a state of extreme happiness
D. To avoid talking about what’s important
BY SHILPA MA’AM
67. Select the most appropriate idiom.
After the Pandemic, his business crumbled and he is in a difficult situation.
A. Bolt from the blue
B. Give a cold shoulder
C. Pull the last straw
D. Be in a tight corner
BY SHILPA MA’AM
68. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Ignoring his father’s warnings, he said, “an elephant in the room” to his mother.
A. The elephant got stuck in the room
B. There is an obvious problem
C. Someone begins to suspect
D. Someone hiding in the room
BY SHILPA MA’AM
69. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Only those having blue blood can dethrone the evil autocrat and restore
equilibrium.
A. Political ideology
B. Vigilant nature
C. Aristocratic lineage
D. Bitter relations
BY SHILPA MA’AM
70. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Go down in flames
A. To fail spectacularly
B. To destroy completely
C. To crash and burn
D. To burn down completely
BY SHILPA MA’AM
71. Select the most appropriate idiom.
The players like the coach because he is honest, realistic and practical in
dealing with them.
A. down to earth
B. by and large
C. far and wide
D. sick and tired
BY SHILPA MA’AM
72. Select the most appropriate idiom.
I invited them to my anniversary dinner but they had other plans, so they
decided to politely decline with the implication that they may come at a later
date.
A. To spoil a moment
B. To take a rain check
C. Call it a day
D. Took it with a grain of salt
BY SHILPA MA’AM
73. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Gift of the gab
A. A gift for a person named Gab
B. A talent for speaking
C. A talent for lying
D. A talent for singing
BY SHILPA MA’AM
74. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
He is very strict with his students but good-natured.
A. his eyes are bigger than his stomach
B. his heart is in the right place
C. he has a big mouth
D. his heart misses a beat
BY SHILPA MA’AM
75. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
To leave no stone unturned.
A. To win everything that is available
B. To control a person completely
C. To do everything possible to achieve something
D. To treat someone/something as if of no importance
BY SHILPA MA’AM
76. Select the most appropriate idiom.
When I went to Egypt and lost my wallet and passport, I was _____________.
A. rolling up my sleeves
B. putting my nose to the grindstone
C. working my fingers to the bone
D. up in a creek without a paddle
BY SHILPA MA’AM
77. Select the most appropriate idiom.
John was always ________ about becoming a millionaire without doing any hard
work.
A. a storm in a tea cup
B. eating like a horse
C. building castles in the air
D. having an ace up his sleeve
BY SHILPA MA’AM
78. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Despite multiple obstacles, she continued with her endeavour, demonstrating
that she has nerves of steel.
A. Extraordinary beauty
B. An absence of fear or anxiety
C. Relentless determination
D. The capacity to maintain composure when stressed
BY SHILPA MA’AM
79. Select the most appropriate idiom.
It’s Christmas and everything looks so beautiful. It makes me believe that Life
is wonderful and pleasant .
A. I’m up in the air
B. I’m facing the music
C. I’m changing my tune
D. life is a bowl of cherries
BY SHILPA MA’AM
80. Select the most appropriate idiom.
We need to make sure that criminals like these get more from the authorities
than a very mild punishment
A. a slap on the wrist
B. an axe to grind
C. a blessing in disguise
D. a taste of their own medicine
BY SHILPA MA’AM
81. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
In life, there will be many situations where you have to choose between the
devil and the deep blue sea
A. To be in dilemma to choose
B. To be in the deep sea
C. To be in a good condition
D. To choose wisely
BY SHILPA MA’AM
82. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Beat around the bush
A. To go around the bush.
B. To live around the bush.
C. To avoid talking about what is important.
D. To talk about something important
BY SHILPA MA’AM
83. Select the most appropriate idiom.
I don't know which career he will choose. He delays making strong decisions
A. sits on the fence
B. is as clean as a whistle
C. turns a blind eye
D. spills the beans
BY SHILPA MA’AM
84. Select the most appropriate idiom.
Amar was left in a difficult situation by his business partners.
A. High and dry
B. Hard and fast
C. Head and shoulders above
D. Heart and soul
BY SHILPA MA’AM
85. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Sacred cow
A. Interrogate
B. Unquestionable
C. Harmful
D. Hateful
BY SHILPA MA’AM
86. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Have your head in the clouds
A. He had his head in the clouds during an important meeting.
B. The pilot had his head in the clouds while flying a plane.
C. They had their heads in the clouds by looking up at the sky during a
meteor shower.
D. She had her head in the clouds by wearing a cloud-shaped hat.
BY SHILPA MA’AM
87. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Black sheep
A. Naive
B. Miscreant
C. Disreputable
D. Intelligent
BY SHILPA MA’AM
88. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
When pigs fly
A. Something that will never last long
B. Something that will never deviate
C. Something that will get completed
D. Something that will never happen
BY SHILPA MA’AM
89. Select the most appropriate idiom.
After his business failed, he had to reduce spending and adjust to a frugal
lifestyle.
A. tighten his belt
B. hit the nail on the head
C. let the cat out of the bag
D. kick the bucket
BY SHILPA MA’AM
90. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Make waves
A. To cause difficulty
B. To take it easy
C. To have patience
D. To give up
BY SHILPA MA’AM
91. Select the most appropriate idiom.
I sometimes accept excess work to please my manager, so I take more
responsibilities than one can manage.
A. get a taste of my own medicine
B. burn my boats
C. hear it straight from the horse’s mouth
D. bite off more than I can chew
BY SHILPA MA’AM
92. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Back to back
A. Something follows immediately after something else.
B. Try to get something.
C. Present and discuss the details of something.
D. Do something very fast or with great energy
BY SHILPA MA’AM
93. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
The best of both worlds
A. Everyone gets a chance
B. Stay strong in a difficult situation
C. Do a perfectly good job
D. Good in every way
BY SHILPA MA’AM
94. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Make waves
A. To cause difficulty
B. To take it easy
C. To have patience
D. To give up
BY SHILPA MA’AM
95. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Don’t you think that the cat’s in the cradle? You never make time for me.
A. Complicated relationship
B. Busy in your work
C. Newly married life
D. Busy in minting money
BY SHILPA MA’AM
96. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Up the ante
A. Increase demands
B. Cost cutting
C. Expensive
D. Mediocre
BY SHILPA MA’AM
97. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Spill the beans
A. To be in a state of shock
B. To have an excuse
C. To have happy period of your life
D. To expose a secret
BY SHILPA MA’AM
98. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Nip in the bud
A. To publicise a long-kept secret
B. To stop something from growing beyond limit
C. To complete a prolonged or unfinished work
D. To suppress something at an early stage
BY SHILPA MA’AM
99. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
From cradle to grave
A. Buying something very cheap or very expensive
B. During the whole span of one’s life
C. Giving directions and telling someone to follow
D. To achieve something you needed
BY SHILPA MA’AM
100. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
See eye to eye
A. To agree with someone
B. To ignore someone
C. To get upset with something
D. To do something pointless
BY SHILPA MA’AM
101. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Chip on the shoulder
A. Happy
B. Offended
C. Emotional
D. Elated
BY SHILPA MA’AM
102. The meaning of which of the following options is ‘Good luck’.
A. Second banana
B. All wet
C. Hang in there
D. Break a leg
BY SHILPA MA’AM
103. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
When our principal said she was leaving the company, I played out the
opportunity to fill the job.
A. glided at the opportunity
B. jumped at the opportunity
C. started at the opportunity
D. ran to the opportunity
BY SHILPA MA’AM
104. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
A vicious cycle
A. a situation in which one problem causes another one, making the original
problem impossible to solve.
B. a situation in which one problem causes another one, making the first one easy to
solve.
C. a situation in which one problem creates another one, making the original
problem easy to forget.
D. a situation in which several problems merge and become one extremely complex
problem.
BY SHILPA MA’AM
105. Select the most appropriate idiom.
I have been living without a lot of money since I lost my job.
A. receiving a kickback
B. living hand to mouth
C. keeping my chin up
D. as genuine as a three-dollar bill
BY SHILPA MA’AM
106. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
He's still keeping his chin up despite all his health problems
A. To keep one’s chin clean and moist
B. To stay safe during difficulty
C. To stay cheerful during difficult times
D. To save others during difficult times
BY SHILPA MA’AM
107. Select the most appropriate idiom.
Even after becoming bankrupt, Charlie is able to maintain an outward show
A. bring down the house
B. keep up appearances
C. bell the cat
D. cut a sorry figure
BY SHILPA MA’AM
108. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
A team's captain always keeps a level head , even in the most challenging
situations.
A. Prefers to keep his head covered with a cap
B. Maintains an equal number of players on the field
C. Remains calm and composed
D. Keeps his head protected with a helmet
BY SHILPA MA’AM
109. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Get itchy feet
A. Judge something primarily on appearance
B. Learn something by memorising it without a thought to what is being learnt
C. To start to want to travel or do something different
D. Join a popular trend or activity
BY SHILPA MA’AM
110. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
On thin ice
A. In a risky position
B. Communicating with friends
C. On a summer vacation
D. On an investigating job
BY SHILPA MA’AM
111. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Keep your pants on
A. To wear the dress neatly
B. To keep calm and quiet
C. To make things proper
D. To work like a tailor
BY SHILPA MA’AM
112. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Through thick and thin
A. Always supporting someone even if there are problems or difficulties
B. Sometimes thin, sometimes thick
C. Never giving up a friendship
D. Never giving up on a goal
BY SHILPA MA’AM
113. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Bite the bullet
A. To avoid a situation
B. To help someone achieve their goals
C. To eat something unpleasant
D. To face a difficult situation
BY SHILPA MA’AM
114. Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Beat around the bush
A. To avoid talking about what is important
B. To await an explanation
C. To take on a task that is way too big
D. To do something without any hesitation
BY SHILPA MA’AM