20 IMPORTANT IDIOMS Through STORY Native English Vocabulary Lesson

(upbeat music)

  • Hello, lovely students.

And welcome back to English with Lucy.

Now if you are a member of my email list,

if you signed up to receive
my PDFs and my newsletters,

then you will know that we
have been doing a big focus

on idioms recently.

Lots of you seem really keen
to expand your vocabulary.

And an amazing way to do
that is to learn idioms.

Idioms are so hard because they
don’t have literal meanings.

You can’t read the words and
understand what they’re about.

So idioms are really hard to learn,

but they are much, much
easier to learn and process,

and retain if you learn them in context.

So this is how today’s
lesson is going to work.

I am going to read you
a story that I wrote,

and it contains 20 idioms.

For the first part of the
lesson, I will read the story.

You can practise your listening skills,

maybe improve your pronunciation,

but I want you to listen
and see if you can identify

all 20 idioms.

Hold your hands like this
each time you hear one,

stick your finger up.

Okay, see if you can get all 20.

After that, we will go through
the story phrase by phrase,

and I will help you understand
each and every idiom.

As always, there is a free PDF and quiz

that goes with this lesson.

If you’d like to download that,

just click on the link
in the description box,

you enter your name
and your email address.

You sign up to my mailing list,

and the PDF will automatically
arrive in your email inbox.

After that, you automatically
receive all of my lesson PDFs,

and all of my news, course
information and offers.

It’s a free service and you
can unsubscribe at any time.

There is also one other thing
that I wanted to discuss.

Before we start this lesson,

I am running an idioms challenge.

It’s a 30 day challenge.

Every single day,

you get a text containing
between six and 10 idioms.

You get a daily video from me.

I read through the text so you
can improve your listening,

and pronunciation skills,

and I talk about the meanings
of all of the idioms.

After you’ve read through the text,

you’ve watched the video,
you can take the exercises.

We have 20 daily exercises.

And as you go through the challenge,

I start to test you on what
you’ve learned in previous days.

This challenge starts
on the 1st of February,

so make sure you sign up.

Before then, this is a 30 day challenge.

It has 30 videos, lessons
and sets of exercises,

but you have lifetime access
so you can take it at any time.

For the pricing and enrollment,

just click on the link
in the description box.

And just ran a communications challenge

and these students loved
it, it was amazing.

We had such a great time, right?

Let’s get started with this idioms lesson.

As I said, there are 20
idioms in this story.

With your hands, see if
you can identify them all.

Obviously, I don’t expect
you to have 20 fingers.

You might have to do two lots.

I want you to use this as a
listening exercise as well

to see how much you pick up

because we’re going to go
through phrase by phrase.

If you do need the extra help,
you can turn on subtitles.

I woke up in the morning feeling
a little under the weather.

I took a deep breath and
tried to pull myself together.

You’ve got to bite the bullet
and attend the interview,

I said to myself.

I went downstairs to have some breakfast.

My mum asked me if I was hungry.

I told her that I could eat a horse.

She made me a big plate of
eggs and I wolfed it down.

I started to feel really
nervous about the interview.

Candidates like me are a dime a dozen.

To add insult to injury, I’d
been unemployed for six months.

Why would anyone hire me?

Perhaps I’m barking up the wrong tree.

Or perhaps I should throw
caution to the wind and just go.

The ball is in my court.

I have to do this.

On the way to the interview,

my bus got stuck in a traffic jam.

I was really down on my luck.

To make matters worse, I
spilled some coffee on my shirt.

I arrived 10 minutes late,

but the boss said,
“Better late than never”.

She said that she would give
me the benefit of the doubt

which I really appreciated.

She was really on the ball
and asked me lots of relevant,

about my past experience.

I managed to give her some good answers.

So far so good, I thought to myself.

By the end of the interview,
I felt a lot better.

She said to me that her
decision was a piece of cake.

She wanted to offer me the position.

I was over the moon.

Finally, I had my dream job.

I told her that I would give her my all.

I was on cloud nine for
the rest of the day.

Oh, lovely, positive story.

Parts of that are actually true.

I did once spill coffee

all over my shirt before a job interview,

but I still got the job, yes.

I have been rejected from quite a few jobs

in my time as well.

I really wanted to work
at the makeup counter

in my local department store

when I was younger and
I applied three times,

and got rejected every single time.

So in the first part of the story,

I said, I woke up in the morning feeling

a little under the weather.

And to feel under the weather

or to be under the weather
is our first idiom.

This means to feel ill or unwell.

It doesn’t mean seriously ill.

It just means I don’t feel
as good as I normally do.

An example, I didn’t go into school

because I was feeling a
bit under the weather.

I hope to feel better tomorrow.

Not that serious, just
not feeling that great.

Okay, next I said,

I took a deep breath and
tried to pull myself together.

And to pull one self
together is our next idiom,

idiom number two.

To pull oneself together

is to recover control of one’s emotions.

Sometimes if I’m feeling
a bit weak or pathetic,

I don’t want to do
something, I tell myself,

pull yourself together, Lucy,

worse things could happen.

An example, calm down and
pull yourself together.

Screaming isn’t going to help.

In the next sentence, I
was speaking to myself.

I said, you’ve got to bite the bullet,

and attend the interview.

And to bite the bullet is our third idiom.

It means to decide to
do something unpleasant

that you have been avoiding.

Something unpleasant or difficult as well.

A big example of this
is with me and running.

I love running, but I like
running in nice weather.

And when it’s really, really cold,

I try to make myself go out
on a run, but I don’t want to.

It’s cold, it’s unpleasant,
it’s more difficult.

I try to make myself bite the bullet,

stop avoiding it and just do it.

An example, I’ve been avoiding
organising my finances,

but I need to bite the bullet
and open that spreadsheet.

When you hear the phrase bite the bullet,

think of Nike, okay, just do it.

Just do it, stop avoiding it, just do it.

That’s our Nike idiom.

The next sentence.

I went downstairs to have some breakfast.

My mum asked me if I was hungry and I said

that I could eat a horse.

I could eat a horse is our next idiom,

and it means I could eat
a lot or I am so hungry.

An example, after running the marathon,

I could have eaten a horse.

I was so hungry.

The next sentence in the story

is she made me a big plate
of eggs and I wolfed it down.

I wolfed it down.

To Wolf something down is
actually a phrasal verb,

but it’s also slang.

So we’re including it here as an idiom.

To wolf something down is to
eat something really quickly.

If you think how a wolf eats,

(chuckles) it goes down
your throat really quickly.

To wolf something down.

Now, if I’m talking about eggs, plural,

why did I say I wolfed it down?

This is because we’re
referring to the plate of eggs.

Mind that one there

as I often hear students
make mistakes with that.

An example, he wolfed down
two plates of lasagna,

and still had room for dessert.

That is my husband.

He just loves lasagna.

Italians I hope you appreciate

the British pronunciation of lasagna.

(laughing)

I do apologise.

Okay, next sentence.

I started to feel really
nervous about the interview.

Candidates like me are a dime a dozen.

A dime a dozen is our six idiom.

And it’s funny because we don’t have dimes

in the British monetary system.

That’s an American coin,
but we still don’t use it.

And a dime a dozen
means very, very common.

Candidates like me are a dime a dozen.

There are loads of
candidates just like me.

I don’t have anything special.

An example, I’m sorry,

but your stamp collection
isn’t worth anything.

Most of the stamps are a dime a dozen.

Most of them are really common.

All right, next sentence.

To add insult to injury.

I’d been unemployed for six months.

Why would anyone hire me?

So number seven is to
add insult to injury,

to add insult to injury.

I have specific connected speech there.

To ends in the vowel sound, o.

And the next word starts
with a vowel sound.

So we always put a little,
wa sound between it.

To add to injury.

If you want to learn more
about connected speech,

I’ve got a whole video about it.

I’ll put that into the description box.

If you want to look deeply at it,

you can try my pronunciation course.

The link is also in the description box.

To add insult to injury means

to make something bad, even worse.

If you look at the
phrase, insult to injury.

This means that you’re already injured,

and now you’ve been insulted

to the bad situation has been made worse.

An example, he broke up with me,

and then to add insult to injury,

he started dating my sister.

Bad situation, made worse.

The next sentence is perhaps
I’m barking up the wrong tree.

Perhaps I’m barking up the wrong tree.

This is a really common
idiom here in the UK.

It means to be wrong about
the reason for something

or the way to achieve something.

For example, I thought that the best way

to hire a video editor
would be to put up posters

around my town but I was
barking up the wrong tree.

What I should’ve done is
posted on an online job board.

I was wrong about the
way to achieve something.

Another example, she thinks
that spending time apart

will solve her marriage problems,

but she’s barking up the wrong tree.

Maybe they need to spend
more time together.

If you visualise this
idiom, imagine two trees.

And there’s a squirrel up this tree.

The little dog is barking at tree here.

He’s barking up the wrong tree.

He’s never going to
achieve what he wants here.

He should go to the other tree.

Next sentence.

Or perhaps I should throw
caution to the wind and just go.

Idiom number nine is to
throw caution to the wind.

This means to act without
thinking of the consequences.

It doesn’t necessarily
mean to act without care

or to act carelessly.

Sometimes it’s used in
quite an inspirational way.

I’m not gonna think about the risks,

I’m going to follow my heart.

An example, I was worried
she would reject me,

but I threw caution to the
wind and asked her out.

Next sentence, the ball is in my court.

I have to do this.

If the ball is in your court,

it means you have to make the next move.

I can’t do anymore, the
ball is in your court.

Visualise two people playing tennis.

This person has the ball.

The ball is in their court.

This other person can’t do anything.

It’s used a lot in
professional situations.

I’ve done as much as I can.

The ball is in your court, you
have to make a decision now.

We are now halfway through the idioms.

Moving on to number 11, let’s
take a look at the sentence.

On the way to the interview,

my bus got stuck in a traffic jam.

I was really down on my luck.

So number 11 is to be down on your luck.

This means to be experiencing
a period of bad luck.

So this isn’t the first bad
thing that’s happened to you.

An example, I really hope
that things improve for you.

You’ve been down on your luck
and you don’t deserve it.

This could be me talking
to a friend who’s been

on three terrible dates.

They really deserve a good date,

but they’ve been down on their luck.

The next one.

To make matters worse, I
spilled some coffee on my shirt.

So this is number 12.

To make matters worse.

And it means almost exactly the same thing

as to add insult to injury.

It means we have a bad situation,

and what has made it
worse is the following.

An example, the thief stole my bag,

and to make matters
worse, he tripped me over.

So not only did I lose
my bag, I also fell over.

If somebody trips you over,
they make you fall down.

Next sentence.

I arrived 10 minutes
late, but the boss said,

“Better late than never.”

Better late than never is our 13th idiom.

It means that it’s better
to do something late

or after it should have been
done than to not do it all.

Sometimes we use it in a sarcastic sense.

If I handed my homework to my
teacher really, really late,

they might say, “Ugh,
better late than never”.

We like to be quite sarcastic in the UK.

An example in context, you
lose 10% of your marks,

if you hand in your coursework late,

but better late than never.

It’s better to lose 10% than to lose 100%.

Okay, next sentence.

She said that she would give
me the benefit of the doubt

which I really appreciated.

Oh, to give someone the
benefit of the doubt.

Idiom number 14.

This means to decide to believe someone,

even if you’re not 100% sure

that what they’re saying
is true or honest.

I don’t know if you’re lying to me,

but I will give you the
benefit of the doubt.

Sometimes if my students
hand in their homework late,

and they tell me they
had internet problems,

I don’t have any proof,

but I give them the benefit of the doubt.

I’ll believe them.

If they keep repeating the
same thing over and over again,

then I won’t give them the
benefit of the doubt anymore.

An example.

I’m not sure if he’ll be able
to deliver on his promises,

but I’m going to give him
the benefit of the doubt.

Next sentence.

She was really on the ball,

and asked me lots of relevant questions

about my past experience.

Idiom number 15 is to be on the ball.

To be on the ball.

This is something that you want to be.

This means to be organised and alert.

An example, you won’t be able to fool him.

He’s very on the ball when it
comes to new tricks and scams.

Sometimes if I make a mistake,

if I wasn’t careful enough with my work,

I tell myself, oh, I need
to be more on the ball.

I need to be more organised and alert,

and just in control of things.

Next sentence.

I managed to give her some good answers.

So far so good, I thought to myself.

(chuckling)

Number 16.

The 16th idiom is so far so good.

And this means everything
until now has gone well.

It means that you haven’t
finished something yet,

but everything along the
way is going positively.

Okay, next sentence.

By the end of the interview,

I felt a lot better.

She said to me that her
decision was a piece of cake.

She wanted to offer me the position.

A piece of cake, idiom
number 17 is very easy.

If something is a piece of
cake, then it’s very easy.

An example.

I thought that exam was a piece of cake,

we should all get full marks.

Next sentence, I was over the moon.

Finally, I had my dream job.

Idiom number 18 to be over the moon means

to be very happy, to be ecstatic.

An example, I was over the moon

when I found out that my
favourite band was playing

in my city.

Next sentence, I told her
that I would give her my all.

I told her that I would give her my all.

Number 19 to give something
or someone your all,

means to give something or
someone your full effort.

Your best try.

An example, I gave it my all,

but I didn’t manage to win the race.

I tried as hard as I possibly could,

I put in my full effort,
but I didn’t win the race.

And the final sentence.

I was on cloud nine for
the rest of the day.

And to be on cloud nine
means to be a elated,

very, very happy.

An example.

After our wedding day,
we were on cloud nine.

It was amazing to finally tie the knot.

To tie the knot is slang
for to get married.

It was amazing to finally get married.

To tie the knot.

Right, that is it for the
story and the 20 idioms.

Don’t forget to download the free PDF

that goes with this lesson.

And if you think you’d like

to do something like this everyday,

learning between six and
10 idioms every single day

with a short daily texts like this,

and a video from me and so
many practise exercises,

then I really recommend
my Idioms Challenge.

If you’d like to sign up,

click on the link in the description box,

all of the information
and pricing info is there.

Don’t forget to connect with
me on all of my social media.

I’ve got my website,
englishwithlucy.co.uk.

I’ve got a cool pronunciation tool there.

There are lots of extra lessons.

I’ve also got my blogging
channel, Lucy Bella

where we document our lives
here in the English countryside.

All of the blogs are fully subtitled

so you can use them
for listening practise,

and to acquire more vocabulary.

Don’t forget to connect
with me on social media.

I’ve got my Instagram at Lucy.

I’ve got my English learning page

which is very new @EnglishwithLucy.

And I’ve also got my Facebook.

I will see you soon for another lesson.

Mwah.

(upbeat music)

(欢快的音乐)

  • 你好,可爱的学生们。

欢迎与露西一起回到英语。

现在,如果您是我的电子邮件列表的成员,

如果您注册接收
我的 PDF 和我的时事通讯,

那么您就会知道我们
最近一直非常

关注成语。

你们中的很多人似乎真的
很想扩大你的词汇量。

一个惊人的方法
是学习成语。

成语之所以难,是因为它们
没有字面意思。

您无法阅读这些单词并
理解它们的含义。

所以习语真的很难学习,

如果你在上下文中学习它们,它们会更容易学习和处理,并且可以记住。

所以这就是今天的
课程将如何运作。

我要给你读
一个我写的故事

,里面有 20 个成语。

在课程的第一部分
,我将阅读这个故事。

你可以练习你的听力技巧,

也许可以提高你的发音,

但我希望你听听
,看看你是否能识别

所有 20 个成语。

每次听到一个声音时都像这样握住你的手,

伸出你的手指。

好的,看看你能不能把20个都搞定。

之后,我们会逐句逐句
地讲故事

,我会帮助你理解
每一个成语。

与往常一样,本课程提供免费的 PDF 和

测验。

如果您想下载它,

只需单击
描述框中的链接,

输入您的姓名
和电子邮件地址。

您注册我的邮件列表

,PDF 将自动
到达您的电子邮件收件箱。

之后,您会自动
收到我所有的课程 PDF,

以及我所有的新闻、课程
信息和优惠。

这是一项免费服务,您
可以随时取消订阅。

我还想讨论另一件事。

在我们开始这节课之前,

我正在运行一个成语挑战。

这是一个 30 天的挑战。

每天,

您都会收到
包含 6 到 10 个习语的文本。

你每天都会收到我的视频。

我通读了课文,以便
您提高听力

和发音技巧,

并讨论
所有成语的含义。

通读

课文、观看视频后,
就可以进行练习了。

我们每天有 20 次练习。

当你完成挑战时,

我开始测试
你在前几天学到了什么。

此挑战从
2 月 1 日开始,

因此请务必注册。

在此之前,这是一个 30 天的挑战。

它有 30 个视频、课程
和练习集,

但您可以终生访问,
因此您可以随时学习。

对于定价和注册,

只需单击
描述框中的链接。

刚刚进行了一次沟通挑战

,这些学生喜欢
它,这太棒了。

我们玩得很开心,对吧?

让我们从这个习语课开始吧。

正如我所说,
这个故事中有 20 个成语。

用你的双手,看看
你能不能把它们都认出来。

显然,我不希望
你有 20 根手指。

你可能需要做两批。

我希望您也可以将其用作
听力练习,

以查看您学到了多少,

因为我们
将逐句进行。

如果您确实需要额外的帮助,
您可以打开字幕。

我早上醒来,感觉
有点不舒服。

我深吸了一口气,
试图让自己振作起来。

你必须硬着头皮
去参加面试,

我对自己说。

我下楼去吃早餐。

妈妈问我饿不饿。

我告诉她我可以吃一匹马。

她给我做了一大盘
鸡蛋,我狼吞虎咽。

我开始对面试感到非常
紧张。

像我这样的候选人是一毛钱。

雪上加霜的是,我
已经失业六个月了。

为什么会有人雇佣我?

也许我在叫错树。

或者也许我应该把谨慎抛在脑后
,然后走开。

球在我的球场上。

我必须这样做。

在去面试的路上,

我的巴士堵车了。

我真的很倒霉。

更糟糕的是,我把
咖啡洒在衬衫上。

我迟到了 10 分钟,

但老板说,
“迟到总比没有好”。

她说她会给
我这个怀疑的好处

,我真的很感激。

她真的很热情
,问了我很多相关的问题,

关于我过去的经历。

我设法给了她一些好的答案。

到目前为止一切顺利,我心想。

面试结束,
我感觉好多了。

她对我说,她的
决定是小菜一碟。

她想向我提供这个职位。

我在月球上。

终于,我有了我梦寐以求的工作。

我告诉她,我会给她我的一切。

那天剩下的时间我都在云九
上。

哦,可爱的,积极的故事。

其中的一部分实际上是真实的。

我曾经

在面试前把咖啡洒在我的衬衫上,

但我仍然得到了这份工作,是的。 在我的时代,

我也被很多工作拒绝

过。

小时候很想去当地百货公司
的化妆柜台工作,

申请了3次

,每次都被拒绝。

所以在故事的第一部分,

我说,我早上醒来感觉

有点不舒服。

感觉在天气下

或在天气下
是我们的第一个成语。

这意味着感到不适或不适。

这并不意味着病得很重。

这只是意味着我感觉
不像平时那么好。

举个例子,我没有去上学,

因为我感觉
有点不舒服。

我希望明天感觉更好。

没那么严重,只是
感觉没那么好。

好吧,接下来我说,

我深吸了一口气,
努力让自己振作起来。

把一个自己拉到
一起是我们的下一个成语,第二

个成语。

振作起来

就是重新控制自己的情绪。

有时,如果我感到
有点虚弱或可怜,

我不想
做某事,我告诉自己,

振作起来,露西,

更糟糕的事情可能会发生。

一个例子,冷静下来,
振作起来。

尖叫是没有用的。

下一句话,我
是在自言自语。

我说,你得

硬着头皮去面试。

咬紧牙关是我们的第三个成语。

这意味着决定
做一些

你一直在避免的不愉快的事情。

一些不愉快或困难的事情。

一个很好的例子
就是我和跑步。

我喜欢跑步,但我喜欢
在天气好的时候跑步。

当天气真的非常冷的时候,

我试着让自己
出去跑步,但我不想这样做。

天冷了,难受了,
更难了。

我试着让自己咬紧牙关,

停止逃避它,就去做。

举个例子,我一直在避免
整理我的财务,

但我需要
硬着头皮打开那个电子表格。

当你听到“咬紧牙关”这句话时,

想想耐克,好吧,就去做吧。

去做吧,停止逃避,去做吧。

这就是我们的耐克成语。

下一句。

我下楼去吃早餐。

我妈妈问我饿不饿,我

说我可以吃一匹马。

我可以吃一匹马是我们的下一个成语

,这意味着我可以
吃很多东西或者我很饿。

举个例子,跑完马拉松后,

我可以吃掉一匹马。

我太饿了。

故事的下一句话

是她给我做了一
大盘鸡蛋,我狼吞虎咽。

我狼吞虎咽。

To Wolf something down
实际上是一个短语动词,

但它也是俚语。

所以我们把它作为一个习语包括在这里。

狼吞虎咽就是
快速吃东西。

如果您认为狼是如何吃东西的,

(笑)它很快就会进入
您的喉咙。

狼吞虎咽。

现在,如果我在谈论鸡蛋,复数,

我为什么说我狼吞虎咽?

这是因为我们
指的是鸡蛋盘。

请注意那里的那个,

因为我经常听到学生
在这方面犯错误。

举个例子,他狼吞虎咽地吃了
两盘千层面,

还有吃甜点的空间。

那是我的丈夫。

他只是喜欢烤宽面条。

意大利人我希望你能欣赏

千层面的英式发音。

(笑)

我道歉。

好,下一句。

我开始对面试感到非常
紧张。

像我这样的候选人是一毛钱。

一角钱一打是我们的六个成语。

这很有趣,因为我们

在英国货币体系中没有一角钱。

那是一枚美国硬币,
但我们仍然不使用它。

一角钱一打
意味着非常非常普遍。

像我这样的候选人是一毛钱。

像我这样的候选人有很多。

我没有什么特别的。

一个例子,我很抱歉,

但你的邮票
收藏一文不值。

大多数邮票都是一角钱。

他们中的大多数真的很常见。

好吧,下一句。

雪上加霜。

我已经失业六个月了。

为什么会有人雇佣我?

所以第七点是
雪上加霜

,雪上加霜。

我在那里有特定的相关演讲。

To 以元音 o 结尾。

下一个单词
以元音开头。

所以我们总是
在它之间放一点,哇音。

增加伤害。

如果您想了解
有关连接语音的更多信息,

我有一个完整的视频。

我会把它放在描述框中。

如果你想深入了解,

可以试试我的发音课程。

该链接也在描述框中。

雪上加霜

意味着使事情变得更糟,甚至更糟。

如果你看这
句话,侮辱伤害。

这意味着你已经受伤了

,现在你已经被侮辱

到了糟糕的境地。

举个例子,他和我分手了,

然后雪上加霜,

他开始和我姐姐约会。

糟糕的情况,变得更糟。

下一句话可能是
我在叫错树。

也许我在叫错树。 在英国,

这是一个非常普遍的
成语。

这意味着
对某事的原因

或实现某事的方式有误。

例如,我认为

聘请视频编辑器的最佳
方式是

在我的城镇周围张贴海报,但我
找错了树。

我应该做的事情被
发布在一个在线工作板上。

我错
了实现某事的方式。

另一个例子,她
认为分开一段时间

可以解决她的婚姻问题,

但她找错了方向。

也许他们需要花
更多的时间在一起。

如果你想象这个
习语,想象两棵树。

这棵树上有一只松鼠。

小狗在这里的树上吠叫。

他找错树了。

他永远不会在
这里实现他想要的。

他应该去另一棵树。

下一句。

或者也许我应该把谨慎抛在脑后
,然后走开。

成语九是
把谨慎抛诸脑后。

这意味着在不考虑后果的情况下采取行动

它并不一定
意味着不小心

行事或不小心行事。

有时它以
非常鼓舞人心的方式使用。

我不会考虑风险,

我会跟随我的心。

举个例子,我担心
她会拒绝我,

但我把谨慎抛在脑后
,约她出去。

下一句,球在我的球场上。

我必须这样做。

如果球在你的球场上,

这意味着你必须采取下一步行动。

我不能再做了,
球在你的球场上。

想象两个人打网球。

这个人有球。

球在他们的球场上。

这个人什么都做不了。

它在
专业情况下被大量使用。

我已经尽我所能。

球在你的球场上,你
现在必须做出决定。

我们现在已经完成了成语的一半。

转到第 11 条,让
我们看一下这句话。

在去面试的路上,

我的巴士堵车了。

我真的很倒霉。

所以11号是你的运气。

这意味着正在经历
一段厄运的时期。

所以这不是
发生在你身上的第一件坏事。

一个例子,我真的
希望你的情况有所改善。

你运气不好
,你不值得。

这可能是我和
一个经历

了三个糟糕约会的朋友谈话。

他们真的值得一个美好的约会,

但他们的运气一直很差。

下一个。

更糟糕的是,我把
咖啡洒在衬衫上。

所以这是第 12 号。

更糟糕的是。

它的含义几乎

与侮辱伤害完全相同。

这意味着我们的情况很糟糕,

而使情况
变得更糟的是以下情况。

例如,小偷偷了我的包,

更糟糕的是,他把我绊倒了。

所以我不仅丢
了包,还摔倒了。

如果有人绊倒你,
他们会让你跌倒。

下一句。

我迟到了 10 分钟
,但老板说:

“迟到总比没有好。”

迟到总比没有好是我们的第 13 个成语。

这意味着,
迟做某事

或在应该做的事情之后
做,总比不做要好。

有时我们以讽刺的方式使用它。

如果我
真的很晚才把作业交给老师,

他们可能会说,“呃,
迟到总比没有好”。

我们喜欢在英国很讽刺。

举个例子,如果你迟交课程作业,你
会失去 10% 的分数

但迟到总比没有好。

输掉10%总比输掉100%要好。

好,下一句。

她说她会给
我这个怀疑的好处

,我真的很感激。

哦,给某人
带来怀疑的好处。

成语 14。

这意味着决定相信某人,

即使你不能 100%

确定他们所说的
是真的还是诚实的。

我不知道你是不是在骗我,

但我会给你
怀疑的好处。

有时如果我的
学生迟交作业

,他们告诉我他们
有网络问题,

我没有任何证据,

但我给他们怀疑的好处。

我会相信他们的。

如果他们
一遍又一遍地重复同样的事情,

那么我不会再给他们
怀疑的好处了。

一个例子。

我不确定他是否
能够兑现他的承诺,

但我会给他
怀疑的好处。

下一句。

她真的很热心,

就我过去的经历问了我很多相关的问题

成语第 15 号是在球上。

要在球上。

这是你想成为的东西。

这意味着要井井有条并保持警觉。

举个例子,你骗不了他的。


涉及到新的技巧和骗局时,他非常有把握。

有时,如果我犯了错误,

如果我对工作不够小心,

我会告诉自己,哦,我
需要更多地在球上。

我需要更有条理、更警觉,

并且能掌控一切。

下一句。

我设法给了她一些好的答案。

到目前为止一切顺利,我心想。

(轻笑)

第 16 条。

第 16 条成语到目前为止非常好。

这意味着
到目前为止一切都很顺利。

这意味着你还没有
完成一些事情,

但是一路上的一切都
在积极地进行。

好,下一句。

面试结束,

我感觉好多了。

她对我说,她的
决定是小菜一碟。

她想向我提供这个职位。

小菜一碟,
成语17很容易。

如果某事是
小菜一碟,那就很容易了。

一个例子。

我以为考试是小菜一碟,

我们都应该得到满分。

下一句,我在月球上。

终于,我有了我梦寐以求的工作。

成语 18 to be over the moon 意味着

非常高兴,欣喜若狂。

例如,

当我发现我
最喜欢的乐队

正在我的城市演出时,我欣喜若狂。

下一句话,我告诉
她,我会全力以赴。

我告诉她,我会给她我的一切。

Number 19 to give something
or someone your all,

意思是
全力以赴。

你最好的尝试。

举个例子,我全力以赴,

但我没能赢得比赛。

我尽我所能,尽我所能,
但我没有赢得比赛。

还有最后一句话。

那天剩下的时间我都在云九
上。

而在云九上,
就是兴高采烈,

非常非常高兴。

一个例子。

结婚那天之后,
我们在云九。

最终喜结连理真是太棒了。

打结
是结婚的俚语。

终于结婚了真是太棒了。

喜结良缘。

对,就是
故事和20个成语。

不要忘记下载

本课程附带的免费 PDF。

如果你认为你想

每天做这样的事情,每天

学习 6 到
10 个成语,

每天有这样的简短文本,

还有我的视频和
很多练习,

那么我真的推荐
我的成语挑战 .

如果您想注册,

请单击描述框中的链接,

所有信息
和定价信息都在那里。

不要忘记在
我所有的社交媒体上与我联系。

我有我的网站
englishwithlucy.co.uk。

我有一个很酷的发音工具。

有很多额外的课程。

我还有我的博客
频道,Lucy Bella

,我们在这里记录了我们
在英国乡村的生活。

所有博客都有完整的字幕,

因此您可以将它们
用于听力练习,

并获得更多词汇。

不要忘记
在社交媒体上与我联系。

我在 Lucy 有我的 Instagram。

我有我的英语学习页面

,这是非常新的@EnglishwithLucy。

我也有我的 Facebook。

我很快就会见到你,上一堂课。

哇。

(欢快的音乐)