Boost Your Score in English!
Master English Idioms & Phrases effortlessly
In this article, you will learn the following:
Learn Fast with Examples
The idiom "Maiden Speech" means first formal speech made by a member of parliament.
But if you separate these two words, the meaning changes completely. Here, are two words
Maiden + Speech
Maiden refers to an unmarried young woman, a virgin.
Speech means a formal address delivered to an audience.
Its literal meaning is," A speech delivered by an unmarried woman (spinster)
the meaning of the idiom. Which is not the meaning of the idiom. In this way,
the word,' maiden' is used as an adjective to mean 'first' or 'untried'.
Don't just read it, - understand it, and remember it forever.
is not an idiom. Here it means you are eating an actual cake. It is a literalmeaning.
Idiomatic expression: This puzzle is a piece of cake. Here it means very
easy task. This idiom is used to describe situations, not for eating or actions like having, eating.
"Eat out" is a phrasal verb but when you separate these two words, 'eat' and 'out, the meaning changes completely.
"Eat out" when you use these two words together, it means to have a meal in a restaurant.
It is usually used when choosing to dine at a cafe, or restaurant.
But "Eat out" is not a phrase, it is phrasal verb.
A phrasal verb consists of a Verb + a particle
Formula: Verb + (a preposition or an adverb) = New Meaning
Example: Give up (They are often idiomatic. You cannot always
guess the meaning just by looking at the individual words.)
While a phrase is a group of words that function together as a
single unit within a sentence but do not contain a subject - verb
pair. Their meaning is typically literal.
Now let's take the following example of a phrase:
He goes for a walk daily in the morning.
Here "in the morning" is a phrase, it is known as prepositional phrase.
A phrase is a group of words that works together as a unit but does not contain
both a subject and a verb." in the morning" is a group of words lacks a subject
(who or what) and a predicate
Here:
- Preposition: in
- Article: the
- Noun: morning (Object of the preposition)
Master Idioms and Phrases quickly with this visual trick - ideal for
competitive exams.
Maintain a Personal Notebook
Write at least 10 idioms & phrases daily from Monday to Saturday.
On Sunday review and revise all the words and try to use them in
your daily life.
Without revision, nothing is possible.
So always remember consistency and revision are the two aspects for
success.
Learn through Visuals
As we know, visual memory lasts longer than texts.
For each idiom:
Know the meaning of the idiom.
Use it in your own sentence
Imagine a real-life scenario
Don't learn randomly, learn idioms in themes
If you try to memorize idioms randomly, definitely you will forget them,
The smarter way is to learn them in context, use them in sentences, after
then do proper revision.
Group them so your brain connects patterns:
- Work/effort: burn the midnight oil
- Emotions: over the moon
- Success: on the top of the world
- Body parts: keep your fingers crossed
- Animal: a sitting duck
Exercise to beat the competition
- Note: Revision + Smart work = Success
- Avoid doing common mistakes:
- Memorizing without usage
- Ignoring revision
- Not solving " Practice Paper"
- Confusing literal vs idiomatic meaning




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