Body Idioms
Phrasal Verbs
Money
Adjective and nouns
100

An approximate method for doing something, based on practical experience rather than theory.

the rule of thumb

100

Boastfully display one's abilities or accomplishments

show off

100

1. The value printed or depicted on a coin, banknote, postage stamp, ticket, etc., especially when less than the actual value.

2. The apparent worth or implication of something

face value

2. Her lie was unconvincing, but he took it at face value.

100

Found or distributed over a large area or number of people.

widespread

200

An annoying or tedious person or thing

pain in the neck

200

1. accept a particular job or responsibility;

2. employ

take on

200

A system of money in general use in a particular country

currency

200

bulky and thick

chuncky

300

Be confronted with the unpleasant consequences of one's actions.

face the music

300

Start doing sth without having really decided if it is the right thing to do or having considered the best way to do it.

rush into

300

Exchange something that represents value for the money it is worth

cash in

300

A temporary structure on the outside of a building, made of wooden planks and metal poles, used by workmen while building, repairing, or cleaning the building

scaffolding

400

Pretend not to notice

turn a blind eye

400

Looking at evidence means digging into the facts in the story – key people, events, numbers, etc. – to see if they ...

hold up

400

Decide something by throwing a coin up in the air and seeing which side is shown after it lands.

toss a coin

400

1. a hissing or rustling sound;

2. impressively smart and fashionable.

swish

500

Lose self-control; panic

lose your head

500

be successful/not successful in a fight, contest, etc.

come off well / badly

500

An expression used when tossing a coin to decide between two alternatives.

heads or tails

500

A sudden, usually temporary malfunction or fault of equipment

glitch