Have a trick up your sleeve: To have a secret plan which you will use at the right time.
Have your cake and eat it too: To have or want more than one can handle or deserves; or to wish for everything their way,
even if the wishes are contradictory.
Have your fill: To be fed up of someone or something.
Have your tail up: To be optimistic.
Have your work cut out: To be very busy.
He who hesitates is lost: Waiting too long can make a person lose an opportunity.
Head for the hills: To run away from trouble or problems.
Head is in the clouds: To be unrealistic.
Head nor tail: Not to be able to make head or tail out of something is not to be able to make any sense of it.
Head on the block: To be held responsible for something that has gone wrong.
Heads will roll: People are going to be punished or sacked for something that has gone wrong.
Hear a pin drop: This idiom is used to refer to complete silence in a place, when you can even hear the sound of a pin dropping.
Hear on the grapevine: To get to know something through rumours or gossip.
Heart in the right place: To be good deep inside even if sometimes the person may not appear to be so.
Heart in your boots: Very unhappy.
Heart in your mouth: To be very scared and nervous.
Heart misses a beat: To be suddenly shocked and stunned by something.
Heart of glass: To be a very emotional person.
Heart-to-heart: A frank and honest conversation between two people.
Heavy-handed: To use excessive force or strictness in dealing with someone or something.
Hedge your bets: Not to risk all you have on one thing but try other options too.
Hide nor hair: Not to have seen the hide or hair of someone is to have seen no trace of that person.
High and dry: To be left all alone with no help.
High and low: To search high and low for something or someone is to search everywhere.
High-wire act: A very risky and dangerous plan, task or activity.
Himalayan blunder: A very serious mistake.
Hit a nerve: When something or someone causes a person to feel hurt, more so emotionally than physically
Showing posts with label best idiomatic dictionary free. Show all posts
Showing posts with label best idiomatic dictionary free. Show all posts
Saturday, 16 April 2011
Best idiomatic dictionary
Wednesday, 6 April 2011
best idiomatic dictionary free
we claim to have best idiomatic dictionary for hundred percent free. the hundreds of idioms which were used by best writers in their acknowledged literature books
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