Posts filed under: Uncategorized

Quick Targets

Idioms 1: MoneyHit the Jackpot

Book 1: Money!

10/23-10/24, Free on Amazon

Check out the first book in the new Quick Targets Idioms Series for free
Thursday and Friday, available from Amazon.

And read it on any device, iOS or Android, with free apps from Amazon. Click here.

Free at: 
Amazon.com
Amazon Canada
Amazon Japan
Amazon Germany
Amazon U.K.
Amazon Brazil
Amazon Italy
Amazon Mexico
Amazon France
Amazon Spain
Amazon Australia

Visit EnglishMobi on the Web, on Facebook, and on Twitter.


English Idioms: Autumn—Turn Over a New Leaf


—v. phr., to make a new start in your life, to change your behavior or your plans. This is an appropriate idiom for autumn, when trees are losing their leaves. But the idiom actually comes from the idea of turning pages in a book. .



Example: 



Brian wanted to turn over a new leaf after his troubles in university.


Related English


The word leaf (n.) also means a part of a book, or a page that your turn. And if you leaf through (phrasal verb) a book, you turn its pages and look at what is on them.

Example: 



She leafed through the magazine while she waited to see the doctor.



Leaf through more idioms with EnglishMobiVisit EnglishMobi on the Web, on Facebook, and on Twitter.

English Idioms—Kick Off

kick offv., to start, to begin.

This idiom comes from American football, where games begin when a player kicks the football to the other team. The phrase today is widely used both in written and spoken English, for events and periods of time, as in The conference kicked off. . ., the school year kicked off . . . The noun kickoff is also common both in the sport and elsewhere, as in the kickoff of the conference.

Examples:

Our team kicked the ball off at the beginning of the game.

The school year kicks off next week.

The school is kicking the year off with a Back to School Party.

The conference will kick off with as keynote speech.


kickoffn., start, beginning.

The noun kickoff has also moved from American football to become a widely used idiom, both as a simple noun and one used in the attributive (as an adjective).

Examples:

The game’s kickoff is scheduled for 7 p.m.

The mayor held a campaign kickoff last week.

The conference began with a kickoff event.


Notes


The first and second halves of American and Canadian football games begin with one team kicking off the ball. With the ball set on a tee, one player kicks it, and the player who catches it tries to run it back. The kicking team then tries to stop the runner by tackling him. Teams also kick off after scoring points.



By John Sailors
(C) 2014, by EnglishMobi.