Friday, August 2, 2019

Book of Idioms, Episode 32

UNDER WRAPS: kept hidden. Often used for something that will later be unveiled, but not always—you can say that the design for the new iPhone is still under wraps.

PUT YOUR MONEY WHERE YOUR MOUTH IS: support something financially rather than just talking about it.

Example- CNN: <Yanukovych said he has initiated new presidential elections and a return to the old constitution that would cut presidential power, and also form a national unity Cabinet.
And he may have put his money where his mouth is. Ukraine canceled the sale of $2 billion in government bonds, the Irish Stock Exchange said.
Russia has been buying the bonds as part of an economic deal between the two countries that helped to set off the fervor of his opposition.>>

To READ THE RIOT ACT to someone is to reprimand someone strongly. To BLOW YOUR STACK is to explode in anger.
Example- Express.co.uk: <
MIKE WILLIAMSON accepts [coach] Alan Pardew was absolutely right to blow his stack over Wednesday’s home rout by Spurs – and says Newcastle fans were equally justified in their mass walk-out.>>


If you are PUTTING LIPSTICK ON A PIG, you're making cosmetic changes that do not change the true nature of something. The original form was "If you put lipstick on a pig, it's still a pig."

A MASH NOTE is a love letter. Buffalo News: <
"In Buffalo, chocolatiers concoct their own marshmallow sauce, understand the nuances of caramel, and temper cocoa butter to a luxurious smoothness," say veteran food writers Jane and Michael Stern. >>


IN THE HOT SEAT: in a difficult position of responsibility. Detroit Free Press: <In General Motors’ first quarterly earnings report since Barra took over as CEO three weeks ago, GM took a stumble Thursday morning, falling way short of profit expectations.
Barra, not surprisingly, took a glass-half-full approach in her first turn as GM head honcho during an earnings conference call with industry analysts and journalists.>>

"Glass-half-full approach" is also idiomatic. We often say that you should look at a glass as half full (rather than half empty)—that it's better to be optimistic than pessimistic. That idea is often used in constructions like the one above.

➤ Read more idioms and phrases, English grammar and vocabulary at Basic English Grammar And Vocabulary .You might also like ⏬

➤ Book of Idioms

➤ Idioms about Animals

➤ Idioms of Expression

➤ Idioms on Food

➤ Idiomatic Expressions

➤ Origin of Idioms

➤ Proverbs

➤ Idioms on Situation

➤ Idioms on Temperature

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