IDIOMS AND PHRASES for IELTS
Jump in with Both Feet: Begin a new experience wholeheartedly.
Sentence – I know you’re nervous about starting school, but you just need to jump in with both feet and do your best!
Jump on the Bandwagon: To follow a trend or craze.
Sentence – I can’t stand these people who just jump on the bandwagon after a win. Where were they last year when the team was terrible?
Jump the Gun: Start doing something too soon.
Sentence – Henry jumped the gun and sent the proofs to the printer before the boss approved them, and she was not happy.
Jump the Shark: To pass peak quality and begin to decline. Often used to describe television programs or movie series.
Sentence – This show used to have some of the wittiest writing in television, but they really jumped the shark when they introduced a contrived alien invasion in the seventh season.
Jump the Track: To shift suddenly from one activity or line of thought to another.
Sentence – Due to a technical issue, the train wasn’t able to slow down ahead of the turn and ended up jumping the track because of its speed.
Jump Through Hoops: Complete a series of tasks in order to satisfy someone.
Sentence – The boss made me jump through a lot of hoops to earn this corner office, believe me. I was doing everything from leading presentations to getting him coffee for months.
Just Around the Corner: Occurring soon.
Sentence – My little brother believes that an alien invasion is right around the corner and that we should prepare ourselves for life on another planet.
Just What the Doctor Ordered: Exactly the thing that is or was needed to help improve something or make one feel better.
Sentence – New lighting is just what the doctor ordered for the waiting room—it looks so much cheerier in here now!
Landmark: The position of a prominent or well-known object in a particular landscape
Sentence – The Bidston Dock cranes have been a Birkenhead landmark for many years.
Lethal: Of an instrument of certain death
Sentence – Snake bites are often lethal.
Liquidation: The act of exterminating
Sentence – The losses he incurred resulted in the liquidation of his assets.
Mammoth: So exceedingly large or extensive as to suggest a giant or mammoth
Sentence – The mammoth building was hideously constructed.
Kangaroo Court: A court of law where proper procedures are not followed at all; a sham judicial proceeding.
Sentence – The kangaroo court decided the punishment must fit the crime and ruled that he stay in his cell during the jailhouse comedy.
Keep (Something) at Bay: Maintain a distance from something or someone.
Sentence – A democracy demonstrates its political power by knowing how to refuse or keep at bay something foreign and unequal that threatens its homogeneity.
Keep a Stiff Upper Lip: Control one’s emotions; not give in to fear or grief.
Sentence – Paul didn’t keep a stiff upper lip because that was the way that he thought that Christians should behave.
Keep an Eye On: To keep an eye on something or someone is to watch it periodically, to keep it under surveillance.
Sentence – We’ve asked the neighbors to keep an eye on the house for us while we are away.
Keep an Eye Peeled: Be observant; watch out for something.
Sentence – Keep your eyes peeled for a delivery coming today.
Keep It Under Your Hat: Don’t tell anyone; don’t reveal this secret.
Sentence – I hear that John and Mary are getting a divorce, but keep it under your hat.
IDIOMS AND PHRASES for IELTS
IDIOMS AND PHRASES for IELTS