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Idioms

The document contains several common idioms and their meanings including "a piece of cake" meaning very easy, "kick the bucket" meaning to die, and "a storm in a tea cup" referring to unnecessary anger or worry over an unimportant matter. It seeks to explain the meanings behind common English idioms.

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Laura Bernabé
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
40 views1 page

Idioms

The document contains several common idioms and their meanings including "a piece of cake" meaning very easy, "kick the bucket" meaning to die, and "a storm in a tea cup" referring to unnecessary anger or worry over an unimportant matter. It seeks to explain the meanings behind common English idioms.

Uploaded by

Laura Bernabé
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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A PIECE OF CAKE

KICK THE BUCKET

A MONKEY WITH A IS STILL AN UGLY THING


GOLDEN RING

AS COOL AS A CUCUMBER

BE UNDER THE WEATHER

LIKE A BROKEN RECORD

A STORM IN A TEA CUP

A PIECE OF CAKE- IT’S VERY EASY


KICK THE BUCKET – DIE
A MONKEY WITH A GOLDEN RING IS STILL AN UGLY THING- YOU CAN’T MAKE
SOMETHING UGLY LOOK GOOD JUST BY DECORATING IT
AS COOL AS A CUCUMBER – VERY CALM OR CALMLY, ESPECIALLY WHEN THIS IS
SURPRISING
BE UNDER THE WEATHER – FEEL NOT COMPLETELY WELL
A STORM IN A TEA CUP- A LOT OF UNNCESSARY ANGER AND WORRY ABOUT A
MATTER THAT IS NOT TOO IMPORTANT

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