Irregular Verbs
Idioms
English Slang
Phrasal Verbs
Numbers
100

The past form of 'ride'.

rode

'Alison rode her bike to the shops as the car had ran out of fuel'.

100

Name the idiom.

See Idiom Prompt 1

'Its a piece of cake'

100

A word which means cup of tea.

Cuppa

'I am putting the kettle on would you like a cuppa?'

100

Phrasal Verbs for 'break'.

To end a relationship.

break up

100

189

one hundred and eighty-nine

200

The past form of 'think'

thought

'A thought seemed to be stirring in his mind'

200

Name the idiom.

See idiom prompt 2.

'Sit on the fence'

200

A word which describes a nearly shut (but not quite) window or door.

Begins with 'a'.

ajar

'Please can you pull the door ajar'

200

Phrasal Verbs for 'break'.

To escape.

break out

200

12,345

twelve thousand,  three hundred and forty-five

300

The past for of 'teach'

taught

'Dad taught Mary how to tie her shoelaces'

300

Name the idiom.

See idiom prompt 3.

'To kill two birds with one stone'

300

A word which means to be very tired. 

Begins with 'K'.

Knackered.

'Can we just go for a short stroll I am knackered from yesterday?'

300

Phrasal Verbs for 'break'.

To get upset

 break down

300

7,535

seven thousand, five hundred and thirty five.

400

The past for 'Buy'

bought

'I bought a new pair of trainers'

400

Name the idiom.

See idiom prompt 4.

'Stuck between a rock and a hard place'

400

A word which means cold. 

Begins with N.

Nippy.

'Gosh its nippy today I should have put a jumper on!'

400

Phrasal Verbs for 'break'.

To force entry into a building.

break in

400

1,005,738

one million, five thousand, seven hundred and thirty-eight

500

The past form of 'Forbid'

Forbade

'Modesty forbade me from mentioning that my novel had been published'

500

Name the idiom.

See idiom prompt 5.

'To beat around the bush'

500

A word which means something is very full.

Begins with 'C'.

Chocca - Short for Choc-a-block.

'My diary is really chocca on Monday morning could you afternoon?'

500

Phrasal Verbs for 'break'.

To develop a skin condition.

break out in

500

573,852,431

five hundred and seventy-three million, eight hundred and fifty-two thousand and four hundred and thirty-one