Expected Phrases and Idioms For SSC and Banking Exams Part 2
Expected Phrases and Idioms For SSC and Banking Exams Part 2
Expected Phrases and Idioms For SSC and Banking Exams Part 2
Origin: Lark is a bird known for its beautiful, long songs and rises very early in
the morning.
Usage: His mother was surprised to see him up with the lark.
2. Play it by ear
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Origin: This phrase originated from play something by ear which means
performing music without having to read from a score: She played violin by ear
she played it instinctively.
Usage: Lets play it by ear as they haven't given us any clear guidelines.
Origin: An animal often kills another animal by biting the jugular vein (tube that
carries blood) in the neck, causing the animal to bleed to death quickly.
Usage: The lawyer went for the jugular of the victim to prove that the charges were
wrong.
4. Go to the dogs
Origin: The origin of this expression is believed to be in ancient China where dogs
were not permitted within the walls of cities. Consequently, stray dogs roamed the
areas outside the city walls and lived off the rubbish thrown out of the city by its
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inhabitants. Criminals and social outcast were often expelled from cities and were
sent to live among the rubbish and the dogs.
Usage: YOU say that our country has gone to the dogs. YOU say, say and say. What
do YOU do about it?
5. Tall tales
Meaning: Boasting.
6. Armchair critic
Meaning: Someone who gives advice based on theory rather than practice.
Usage: Don't let Radha's comments bother you. She's just an armchair critic. Buy
whichever car you want.
Origin: It was the custom of Native American tribes to bury their hatchets (a
cutting tool) as a symbol of forgetting the fight.
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8. Vote with ones feet
Origin: When the Opposition walks out of the Parliament, they vote with their feet
that they oppose the decision of the government.
Usage: When the leader spoke in favour of the management, the labourers voted
with their feet.
Meaning: So worried, confused or annoyed that one does not know what to do next.
Origin: Wit means the capacity to think and understand. When it is the end of
someones wit, they are not able to think properly.
Usage: The sudden notice from the manager had me at my wits end.
Origin: This expression originated from how birds prepare their nests for
hatching.
Origin: Hornet is a wasp dangerous than bees and they aggressively guard their
nests. When anyone stirs up their nest, they go for the jugular of the people
nearby the nest.
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Usage: He stirred up a hornets nest by speaking ill about the victim.
Origin: This idiom is derived from a proverb in John Heywood's collection of 1546:
"When he should get aught (anything), each finger is a thumb."
Origin: The flight of a bee is often straight, especially when it targets an attacker
or a flower.
Usage: It was an old custom in Europe to make a beeline for hostess before meeting
anyone else.
14. Featherbrained
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Origin: A birds brain is very small. Featherbrained refers to a smaller size of the
brain and related reduction in its capability.
Usage: She is featherbrained and I have to remind her things very often.
Meaning: To make a major issue out of a minor one, to cause something simple to
seem much more difficult or important
Origin: Treating a molehill like a mountain is unnecessary and foolish and makes
the situation worse and difficult to resolve.
Usage: Miranda made a mountain out of a molehill when Rooney broke a vase by
mistake.
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Origin: The phrase comes from Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet:
Romeo: Switch and spurs, switch and spurs; or I'll cry a match.
Mercutio: Nay, if thy wits run the wild-goose chase, I have done, for thou hast more
of the wild-goose in one of thy wits than, I am sure, I have in my whole five.
Although chasing a wild goose seems pointless and doomed to failure,
Shakespeare's reference was to a 16th-century horseracing requiring riders to
follow a leader in a particular formation (presumably resembling a flock of geese in
flight).
Usage: I was on a wild goose chase when I lost the address slip.
Sentence: It is important to keep a level head when you're dealing with a dangerous
situation like this one.
Usage: She threw herself to the dogs to save her sisters reputation.
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20. Throw the baby out with the bath
Meaning: To lose the good parts when you get rid of the bad parts of something.
Usage: I lost my car keys when I was hastily throwing away my metallic earrings. I
wish hadn't thrown the baby out with the bath.
Origin: High and dry originally referred to ships that were beached. The 'dry'
implies that, not only were they out of the water, but had been for some time and
could be expected to remain so.
Usage: She was in two minds about accepting the job offer.
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23. Kick someone or something to the curb
Usage: He was kicked to the curb as a part of the companys new policy to increase
efficiency.
Origin: The original phrase was call it half a day when someone left the workplace
before the work day was over.
Meaning: To do a lot of difficult things before one is allowed to have or do what one
wants.
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Usage: Schools make the parents jump through hoops before they admit the
children.
Origin: Swiss bankers are popularly associated with extremely secretive policies,
while gnomes in fairy tales live underground, in secret, counting their riches.
Zrich is the commercial center of Switzerland.
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Origin: Ducks and drakes is the old English name for the pastime of skimming flat
stones on the surface of water to make them bounce as many times as possible.
Usage: His mother asked him to stop playing duck and drakes and concentrate on
their family business.
Origin: Fast-and-loose is a cheating game played with a stick and a belt or string.
Usage: How can you trust Job who plays fast and loose with everything?
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Usage: She gave me a curtain lecture last night when the party was going on.
Origin: Niche originally refers to a shallow slit, especially one in a wall to display a
statue or other ornament which required a focused effort to make. Then, niche was
used to mean a comfortable or suitable position in life or employment.
Usage: You can carve out a niche with a consistent life style.
Origin: This hyperbolic term suggests noise loud enough to pose a threat to the
building-an unlikely occurrence. In the late 1800s, British music-hall comedians
punned on it: when the audience greeted a joke with silence, they said, "Don't clap
so hard; you'll bring down the house (it's a very old house)."
Usage: Louis new play brought the house down last night.
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32. Raining cats and dogs
Origin: Odin, the Norse god of storms, was often pictured with dogs and wolves,
which were symbols of wind. Witches, who supposedly rode their brooms during
storms, were often pictured with black cats, which became signs of heavy rain for
sailors. Therefore, raining cats and dogs may refer to a storm with wind (dogs)
and heavy rain (cats).
Usage: No, I cannot go out now, its raining cats and dogs.
Meaning: Said to mean that you are extremely bad at doing something.
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Meaning: To pretend not to have noticed it.
Origin: The English naval hero Admiral Horatio Nelson during the Battle of
Copenhagen in 1801 deliberately raised his telescope to his blind eye, thus ensuring
that he would not see any signal from his superior giving him discretion to
withdraw from the battle.
Usage: The shopkeeper turned a blind eye when the kid took one of the chocalates.
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36. Know the Ropes
Origin: In olden days, it was an essential maritime skill to know how to handle the
ropes used to operate the ship.
Usage: She will be our new Project Head. She knows the ropes.
Origin: Showing someone the ropes of the ship was a difficult and comprehensive
task during earlier times with so many ropes acted together in various fashion to
guide the ship.
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Usage: He is good at showing someone the ropes.
Origin: It is said that a dove brought an olive branch to Noah to indicate that
Gods anger had died down and the flood waters had abated.
Usage: People wish for the countries engaged in wars to extend the olive branch.
Origin: 'To edge the teeth' described the feeling of sensitivity caused by acidic
tastes.
Usage: My new neighbour sets my teeth on edge with his tall tales.
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40. Bark up the wrong tree
Origin: This phrase has its origin in hunting: a dog barking at the bottom of a tree
under the mistaken impression that the quarry (animal being hunted) is up the tree.
Meaning: A very unlikely, ridiculous story; a plot with a high level of build-up and
complicating action, only to be resolved with an anti-climax or ironic reversal,
usually one that makes the entire story meaningless.
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Origin: According to Eric Partridge, an aristocratic family living in Park Lane is
searching for a lost dog, and an American answers the advertisement with a
shaggy dog that he has found and personally brought across the Atlantic, only to be
received by the butler at the end of the story who takes one look at the dog and
shuts the door in his face, saying, "But not so shaggy as that, sir!"
Origin: Trumpet was blown when a king or troop returned home after winning a
battle.
Origin: The Oxford English Dictionary records: "the custom (in the 18th century
prevalent in France and sometimes imitated in England) of going away from a
reception, etc. without taking leave of the host or hostess. Hence, jocularly, to take
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French leave is to go away, or do anything, without permission or notice."
The intend of this behaviour is to leave a party without disturbing the host.
Usage: He got fired from his job because of the French leave that he took last
month.
Usage: His effort to make his mother agree to his decision ended in smoke.
Usage: People find it difficult to remain in the swim in this era of information
overload.
Origin: This phrase was coined as a slogan during Second World War as part of
the US Office of War Information's attempt to limit the possibility of people
inadvertently giving useful information to enemy spies. The slogan was actually
'Loose Lips Might Sink Ships.
Usage: We lost the battle because our troops were tricked into revealing confidential
information. Loose lips sink ships, you see.
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Origin: Following the instructions letter by letter
Usage: I held my ground when they asked me to give them the file.
Meaning: To decide something and express your decision especially when faced
with opposition or disobedience.
Usage: The management put their foot down and decided to move on with the new
policy.
Origin: Be it a cat or a mat, rubbing up in the wrong way is not good. A mat and a
cats fur becomes rough. Also, a cat doesnt like rubbing it up from tail to head, it
likes to be rubbed up from head to tail.
Usage: Often we end up rubbing someone up in the wrong way. People must learn
that actions must be judged by intentions also to avoid conflicts.
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We hope that this post on Phrases and Idioms for SSC and Banking exams helps you face the
English Section of your next exam confidently. What are the idioms and phrases you want to
know in detail? Tell us in the comments. Also, do check out the Part-1 of Phrases and Idioms
for SSC and Banking Exams and some other posts:
Here's some more study material you can use to strengthen your English:
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More English Study Material
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