Weekly English Words with Alisha Body Idioms

Alright, welcome back to Weekly Words. My
name is Alisha, and today we’re going to

talk about body idioms. Yeah! Let’s start.

‘Back to back’ is the first one.
‘Back to back’ means one right after another.

In a sentence; “I have two meetings back
to back today, I am so busy”.

The next idiom is ‘can’t stomach’. Nice
job, stomach.

‘Can’t stomach’ means that you don’t
like something. Used to refer to food or just

something that’s gross. Something that’s
really gross. “I can’t stomach the thought

of eating that old pie.” “I can’t stomach
the thought of working with that guy another

day, he’s terrible. Stevens!”

Next phrase is ‘eyes are bigger than one’s
stomach’.

When you’re at the supermarket, or when
you’re at a restaurant and you see a picture

of food, or you see a food item in front of
you, and you think to yourself, “That looks

really good. I’m going to get that/I’m
going to buy that.” Then it comes to you

and you realize you can’t eat it all. This
is the phrase that we use; “My eyes were

bigger than my stomach. I saw it and it looked
delicious, but I can’t put all of that food

in my stomach”. “I ordered a blooming
onion one time and I couldn’t eat it all.

My eyes were bigger than my stomach.”

Next is ‘a pain in the neck’.
A pain in the neck. There are a few other

variations on other body parts that you might
be able to use with this, ‘a pain in the…’

something else. ‘Pain in the neck’ is
something that’s troublesome, or something

that you don’t want to have to worry about.
Something that bothers you, that’s trouble.

In a sentence, “I have so many reports that
I need to catch up on this week, it’s a

real pain in the neck”. That’s a true
story actually; I have to write a bunch of

reports today.

To ‘pull one’s own weight’ is the next
one.

‘To pull your weight’ means to do the
job that you’re assigned to do. You have

something that you need to be responsible
for, so you need to make sure you do it.

In a sentence, “Steven didn’t pull his
weight at the meeting last week. I’m afraid

we’re going to have to let him go”. “Pull
your weight Stevens! You’re bringing us

down.”

The next is the end. This was body idioms
this week, so try out a few of these and we’ll

see you again next time for more fun stuff.
Bye!

好的,欢迎回到每周词汇。 我的
名字是 Alisha,今天我们要

谈谈身体习语。 是的! 开始吧。

“背靠背”是第一个。
“背靠背”意味着一个接一个。

一句话; “我今天有两个会议
背靠背,我很忙”。

下一个成语是“不能忍受”。 干得好
,胃。

“不能吃”的意思是你不
喜欢某样东西。 用来指食物或

只是粗俗的东西。
真的很恶心的东西。 “一

想到要吃那个老馅饼,我就受不了。” “我无法忍受
改天和那个人一起工作的想法

,他太糟糕了。 史蒂文斯!”

下一句是“眼睛比
肚子大”。

当你在超市,或者当
你在餐厅看到

食物的图片,或者你看到面前的食物
时,你会想,“看起来

真不错。 我要得到那个/
我要买那个。” 然后它来到你身边

,你意识到你不能把它全部吃掉。 这
是我们使用的短语; “我的眼睛

比我的肚子还大。 我看到了,看起来很好
吃,但我不能把所有的食物都放进

肚子里”。 “我有一次点了一个开花的
洋葱,但我不能全部吃掉。

我的眼睛比我的肚子还大。”

接下来是“颈部疼痛”。
脖子疼。

其他身体部位还有一些其他变化,您可能
可以使用它,“疼痛……”

其他东西。 “颈部疼痛”是
一件很麻烦的事情,或者是

你不想担心的事情。
困扰你的事情,那就是麻烦。

一句话,“我这周有很多报告
需要赶上,

真是让人头疼”。 这实际上是一个真实的
故事; 我今天要写一堆

报告。

“自重”是下
一个。

‘To pull your weight’ 意思是
做你被分配去做的工作。 你有

一些事情需要
负责,所以你需要确保你做到了。

用一句话来说,“
史蒂文上周的会议上没有尽全力。 恐怕

我们将不得不让他离开。” “把
你的体重史蒂文斯! 你让我们

失望了。”

接下来是结束。 这是
本周的身体习语,所以尝试其中一些,我们

下次再见,以获得更多有趣的东西。
再见!