Lesson
29 Idioms Teaching
An idiom is an expression that has a meaning different from the meaning of its
individual words. Read the two sentences below. One uses an idiom and one uses
literal language.
The flu had me feeling under the weather.
The flu had me feeling tired and sickly.
Here are some other examples of idioms and their meanings:
Idiom Meaning
all thumbs very clumsy, especially with one’s hands
get cold feet become timid; be afraid of doing something new
on the ball alert; intelligent; efficient
blow one’s stack get very angry
A. Idioms in Action
Read the words and phrases below and the sentences that follow. Complete each
sentence by writing a literal word or phrase that has the same meaning of the
idiom shown below the blank.
A. were correct E. fail or succeed H. overjoyed
B. make him conceited F. ran I. bankrupt
C. irritates me G. learning how to ride J. visit
D. write or call
1. After we won the game, most of the fans were walking on air. _______
3. I hope Jay will stay in touch when he moves to a different town. _______
5. The people who started up the new dot-com ended up stone broke. _______
6. My little sister is finally getting the hang of her new bicycle. _______
10. You hit the nail on the head with your answer to the third question. _______
VOCABULARY 57
Name Date
Lesson
29 Idioms More Practice
B. Vocabulary in Action
Underline ten different idioms in the sentences below. Then define each one
using the context of the sentence to help you.
1. Georgia has a green thumb and shares her vegetables with us.
Meaning: ___________________________________________________________________________
2. Okay, give me your ear because I’m only going to say this once!
Meaning: ___________________________________________________________________________
3. Pull up a chair and take a load off.
Meaning: ___________________________________________________________________________
4. I think you will get your hands dirty if you get involved in that questionable business.
Meaning: ___________________________________________________________________________
5. Get this straight, okay; I’m in charge of this project.
Meaning: ___________________________________________________________________________
6. Rosa is really blue since her cat died.
Meaning: ___________________________________________________________________________
7. Don’t give me the runaround, just do the work on time.
Meaning: ___________________________________________________________________________
8. It was hard to keep a straight face when Ken imitated the comic.
Meaning: ___________________________________________________________________________
9. Alanna got the nod to play shortstop.
Meaning: ___________________________________________________________________________
10. After a short rest I caught my second wind and continued the climb.
Meaning: ___________________________________________________________________________
C. Vocabulary Challenge
Copyright © McDougal Littell Inc.
Rewrite each sentence, replacing the underlined word or phrase with one of the
following idioms. Then write a short meaning.
on the tip of his tongue getting my feet wet under my belt busy as a bee
1. Martin had the answer ready, but Lily said it first. 3. I’m just getting ready, so I’d like some tips
about the job.
Idiom: ________________________________
Idiom: ________________________________
Meaning: ______________________________
Meaning: ______________________________
2. Leslie was spending all her time preparing for
the holidays. 4. I felt better when I’d gotten a hot meal inside
me.
Idiom: ________________________________
Idiom: ________________________________
Meaning: ______________________________
Meaning: ______________________________
58 VOCABULARY