Travel Idioms
Phonetics
Verbs of Movement
Shakespeare
Phrasal nouns
100

off the _____ track

beaten

100

church

/tʃɜːtʃ/



100

We cought a youth trying to _______ into the match without paying

sneak

100

Telling joke is a good way to ______ at the start of a presentation

break the ice

100

His parets were actors, so his up_____ was rather unusual

upbringing

200

to have ____ feet

itchy

200

private

 /ˈpraɪvət/



200

When the baby was asleep at last, she t________

out of the room

tiptoed

200

you can achieve anything or go anywhere

The world's your oyster!

200

I like that brand of sweeteners, they don't leave a nasty after_____

aftertaste

300

to live out of a _____

suitcase

300

world

 /ˈwɜːrld/



300

Andrew hurt his knee when he was tackled heavily and l_____ off the pitch

limped

300

I told Matt what I knew about his girlfriend, sometimes you have to be _____

cruel to be kind

300

After an emotional out_______, he ran into his bedroom crying

outburst

400

To ____ up the culture

soak

400

Germany

/ˈdʒɜːməni/



400

She s_______ furiously out of the café, vowing never to see him again

stormed

400

I'd hade it with him, so I sent him _______

packing 

400

I'm afraid there's been a bit of a ______-up. I think I've got your case and you've got mine.

mix-up

500

to travel on a _____ (low budget)

shoestring

500

thorough

 UK:*/ˈθʌrə/ US:/ˈθɜroʊ, ˈθʌroʊ/

500

At the end of a long day, the boys _______ home wearily

trudged
500

Deep down, I knew it was the wrong decission

in my heart of hearts

500

When my boss saw the sales figures, she had a complete _____down, and started shouting at us.

meltdown (crisis)

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