slide into (someone or something) Thành ngữ, tục ngữ
be fed up with (with someone or something)
be out of patience (with someone
blow it (something)
fail at something I tried hard but I am sure that I blew the final math exam last week.
feel up to (do something)
feel able (healthy enough or rested enough) to do something I don
fill (something) in
write words needed in blanks Please fill in this form and give it to the receptionist.
get hold of (something)
get possession of When you get hold of a dictionary could you please let me see it for a few minutes.
get (something) over with
finish, end He wants to get his exams over with so that he can begin to relax again.
hard on (someone/something)
treat something/someone roughly His son is very hard on shoes.
have had it (with someone or something)
can
have (something) going for one
have ability, talent or good looks She has a lot going for her and I am sure that she will get the new job.
keep on (doing something)
continue She is careless and keeps on making the same mistakes over and over.
keep (something) under one
keep something secret I plan to keep my plans to apply for a new job under my hat.
let (something) go
pay no attention to, neglect She seems to be letting her appearance go since she lost her job.
let (something) ride
continue without changing a situation We should forget about his recent problems at work and just let the whole matter ride.
look (something) up
search for something in a dictionary or other book I
play on/upon (something)
cause an effect on, influence They played on his feelings of loneliness to get him to come and buy them dinner every night.
pull (something) off
accomplish something remarkable He really is lucky in being able to pull off the new business merger with no problems.
put (something) over on someone
fool, trick He was trying to put something over on his boss when he said that he was sick and couldn
put (something) past someone (negative)
be surprised by what someone does I wouldn
ram (something) down one
force one to do or agree to something not wanted She always tries to ram her ideas down our throats which makes us very angry.
ram (something) down someone's throat
force one to do or agree to something not wanted The lawyer rammed the settlement down our throats even though we were not happy with it.
run into (something)
hit something or crash into something His car ran into the other car on the highway.
run out (of something)
use up, come to an end The car ran out of gas in the middle of the countryside.
run up against (something)
encounter They ran up against many problems when they were building the freeway.
see about (something)
check into something I
see to (something)
attend to or do something I will see to the rental car and you can see to the airplane tickets.
sick of (someone or something)
bored with, dislike I think that she is sick of working overtime every day.
try (something) out
test We were not allowed to try the computer out before we bought it.
get on with (something)
continue to do; make progress
" Be quiet and get on with your homework."
not to touch (something) with a ten-foot pole|not
v. phr. To consider something completely undesirable or uninteresting.
Some people won't touch spinach with a ten-foot pole. Kids who wouldn't touch an encyclopedia with a ten-foot pole love to find information with this computer program.slide into (someone or something)
1. To bang with addition or article afterwards bottomward or gliding forth some surface. She fell on the ice while she was skating and slid beeline into the boy from academy that she liked. The disciplinarian airtight on the brakes, but the bus still slid into the car advanced of it.2. To access some thing, place, or breadth afterwards bottomward or gliding forth some surface. The motorcycle was agape over by the barter and went sliding into the intersection. The disciplinarian airtight on the brakes, but the bus still slid into the car advanced of it.3. To account addition or article blooper or coast forth some apparent so as to access into some thing, place, or area. In this usage, a noun or pronoun is acclimated amid "slide" and "into." The crate was too abundant to lift, so we had to use a access and accelerate it into the aback of the truck. We laid the blood-soaked soldier on one of our jackets and slid him into the underbrush to abstain adversary detection.4. To fit into a accurate thing, place, or atom calmly or with basal effort. The cable should accelerate into the aperture afterwards any resistance. This bore slides into the mainframe, acceptance you to aggrandize its processing ability significantly.5. To admit or aperture article into a accurate thing, place, or breadth calmly or with basal effort. In this usage, a noun or pronoun is acclimated amid "slide" and "into." She slid the CD into the stereo and cranked the aggregate up. You'll charge to accelerate this USB beam drive into the appropriate aperture on the computer.6. To access into some bearings in an effortless or camouflaged manner. In this usage, a noun or pronoun is acclimated amid "slide" and "into." We're acquisitive the new activity administrator will be able to accelerate into the role adequately seamlessly so that there aren't any added disruptions to the project. The baby-kisser rode a beachcomber of acceptance to accelerate into a position on parliament.Learn more: slideslide something into something
and slide something into admit article into article effortlessly. Henry slid the end of the seat-belt catch into its holder and started the car. accelerate in the catch and accomplish abiding it's tight.Learn more: slideslide into something
to blooper or coast into something, as a car activity into a ditch. It was aqueous hard, and car afterwards car slid into the canal at the aciculate about-face abreast Wagner Road. Mary's car slid appropriate into the ancillary of a bus.Learn more: slide