martes, 24 de septiembre de 2013

IDIOMS WITH PARTS OF THE BODY




· Arm, back, blood and bone

- To give one´s right arm to … (Dar lo que fuera por...)
I´d give my right arm to have that wonderful job.

- To keep someone at arm´s length (Mantenerse alejado de alguien)
He´s a weird man. You´d better keep him at arm´s length.

- With open arms (Con los brazos abiertos)
They welcomed her with open arms.

- Behind someone´s back (Sin conocimiento de alguien)
He was furious when he discovered they had insulted him behind his back.

- To see the back of something (Ver algo terminado).
I´m looking forward to finishing all this work. I´ll be glad to see the back of it.

- To get someone´s blood up (Ponerse de los nervios, odiar algo)
It gets my blood up to see how bad behaved those children are.

- To be in someone´s blood (Llevar algo en la sangre)
She´s really good at dancing. It must be in her blood.

- To make no bones about something (Decir algo que puede ser desagradable directamente y sin rodeos)
He didn´t make any bones about it and told his wife he had met another woman.

- To have a bone to pick with someone.(Tener una cuenta pendiente con alguien)
He´s got a bone to pick with her since she refused to help him with the report.

· Brain, chest, ear and elbow

- To be wet behind the ears (No tener experiencia)
He´s just finished his degree and is still wet behind the ears.

- To go in one ear and come out the other (Entrar por un oido y salir por el otro)
I´ve told him a million times but it goes in one ear and comes out the other.

- To keep one´s ear to the ground (Mantenerse atento)
I´ve heard they´re selling that house very cheap, so keep your ears to the ground.

- To be up to one´s ears (also eyes or neck) (Estar hasta arriba de …)
I´m up to my ears in all this work.

- To play something by ear (improvisar)
I haven´t planned anything for the weekend. Let´s play it by ear.

- To get something off someone´s chest (quitarse algo de encima, confesar)
I´ve been worried since we argued, so I´ll tell her the truth and get it off my chest.

- To rack one´s brains (devanarse el cerebro)
I´ve been racking my brains for hours but at last I´ve come up with a solution.

·Eyes and fingers

- To be up to the eyes in something
(estar hasta el cuello de…)
I´m up to the eyes in work today.

- To catch someone´s eye (atraer la atención de alguien)
She fancies him and keeps on trying to catch his eye.

- To turn a blind eye to something (ignorar algo)
He prefers turning a blind eye to his debts and not worrying about them.

- To keep one´s fingers crossed (cruzar los dedos)
I´m taking my driving test for the fourth time. So, fingers crossed!

- To have a finger in every pie (estar involucrado en muchas actividades)
She has a finger in every pie: she does yoga, heads several associations…

- To be all fingers and thumbs (tener poca habilidad con las manos)
I broke three glasses and two plates today. I´m all fingers and thumbs!




· Neck, nose and shoulder

- To be neck and neck (estar a la misma altura)
The cyclists were neck and neck up to the last minute.

- To be up to the neck in something (estar hasta el cuello)
They´re up to the neck in housework.

- To pay through the nose for something (pagar demasiado por algo)
They paid 500 euros for an old TV set. Definitely, they paid through the nose!

- To give someone the cold shoulder (ignorar a alguien, dejar de hablarle)
After they argued, she´s been giving him the cold shoulder.

- To rub shoulders with someone (codearse con alguien)
Now that she is managing director she rubs shoulders with important people.

- To breathe down someone´s neck (observar/leer por encima del hombro de alguien)
I wish she´d stop breathing down my neck when I´m reading.

· Tongue and tooth

- To have a sweet tooth (ser goloso)
Children usually have a sweet tooth. They love sweets.

- To hold one´s tongue (callarse algo)
I thought her outfit was awful but I hold my tongue.

- To have something on the tip of one´s tongue (tener algo en la punta de la lengua)
I had the word on the tip of my tongue but couldn´t remember it.

- To bite one´s tongue off (morderse la lengua)
I knew he was lying and I wanted to tell the others, but I bit my tongue off



MORE BODY IDIOMS AT YOUTUBE


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