Take a test on clothing-related idioms.
Конструктор уроків
Take a test on clothing-related idioms.
1
Fill in the gaps with the correct letters or words.
2
Roll up one’s sleeves = get down to hard work.
What burns a hole in your pocket is the money you are tempted to spend.
Dressed to kill / dressed to the nines = be dressed in nice or sexy clothes.
A wolf in sheep’s clothing = a person who seems to be friendly or not likely to cause any harm but is really an enemy.
The gloves are off. This phrase means that people have decided to compete aggressively with each other.
The phrase “I’ll eat my hat” is used to say that you think something is very unlikely to happen.
Have ants in one’s pants = to be very excited or impatient about something and unable to stay still.
Pull one’s socks up = to try to improve one's performance or behaviour because it has not been good enough recently.
If two or more people are cut from the same cloth, they are very similar in their character, attitudes, or behaviour.
Have a card up one’s sleeve = to have a secret plan, idea, or advantage that can be utilised if and when it is required.
The shirt off someone’s back = anything that someone has, including the things they really need themselves, that someone else takes from them or they are willing to give.
Sources: https://www.englishclub.com/vocabulary/idioms-clothing.htm
https://dictionary.cambridge.org
https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com
https://www.collinsdictionary.com
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