Glossary:Idiom: Difference between revisions
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== Examples == | == Examples == | ||
"It was raining cats and dogs" - it was raining in great amounts | "It was raining cats and dogs" - it was raining in great amounts <br/> | ||
"Wait until the cows come home" - to wait forever <br/> | |||
"Kill two birds with one stone" - to achieve two results at the same time <br/> | |||
"One's hour has come" - to die | "One's hour has come" - to die | ||
Revision as of 21:50, 29 October 2012
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Idiom
/ˈɪdɪəm/
Definition
Idiom is a set expression, which meaning is not derivable from the meaning of its individual components.
Examples
"It was raining cats and dogs" - it was raining in great amounts
"Wait until the cows come home" - to wait forever
"Kill two birds with one stone" - to achieve two results at the same time
"One's hour has come" - to die
Related terms
- Phraseme
References and links
Idioms.The Free Dictionary
Oxford Dictionary