daily-life
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A close shave
A narrow escape from a dangerous or difficult situation.
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Get Off on the Wrong Foot
To begin an activity, relationship, or interaction in a way that creates immediate problems or a negative impression.
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Get Out of Bed on the Wrong Side
To be in a bad mood from the moment you wake up, often for no apparent reason.
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Get Your Ducks in a Row
To organize one's tasks, affairs, or plans in a systematic and orderly manner.
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Come rain or shine
Regardless of the weather or any difficulties, something will happen as planned.
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Once in a while
Occasionally; not often but sometimes.
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Paint yourself into a corner
To create a difficult or inescapable situation for yourself through your own actions.
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Hit the hay
To go to bed or go to sleep.
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A cat nap
A cat nap is a short, light sleep, often taken during the day.
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Have bigger fish to fry
To have more important or pressing matters that demand your attention.
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Catnap
A brief, light sleep, typically taken during the day.
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Get caught in a downpour
To be unexpectedly subjected to a very heavy and sudden rain shower.
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Weather permitting
This phrase indicates that an event or activity will take place only if the weather conditions are favorable.
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Cry over spilled milk
To express regret or sorrow over a past event or loss that cannot be changed or undone.
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Stuck in the mud
To be in a difficult situation from which it is hard to escape or make progress.
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Down with an illness
To be suffering from an illness, often implying a state of being bedridden or otherwise incapacitated.
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Hang up one's hat
To retire from a job or activity, or to settle down permanently in a location.
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Do it standing on your head
To perform a task or achieve something with extreme ease, implying it requires virtually no effort or difficulty.
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Tighten one's belt
To reduce spending and live more frugally due to economic hardship.
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Under one's belt
To have achieved or experienced something, which adds to one's skills, experience, or accomplishments.
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Up to your ears in something
This phrase describes being completely overwhelmed or deeply buried in a large quantity of something, often responsibilities, problems, or work.
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Have your hands full
To be extremely busy or preoccupied with many tasks or responsibilities.
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Give someone a hand
To help someone with a task or difficulty.
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A pain in the neck
Someone or something that is very annoying or troublesome.
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A one-horse town
A one-horse town is a small, often isolated community with very few amenities or opportunities.
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Take a bath
To wash one's body by immersing oneself in a tub of water, often for hygiene or relaxation.
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To be out of luck
To no longer have any good fortune, opportunity, or a chance for a positive outcome.
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Glass half full
To have a "glass half full" perspective means one is optimistic and tends to focus on the positive aspects of a situation rather than the negatives.
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What's the point
This interrogative phrase is used to express a sense of futility, a lack of purpose, or a questioning of the value or relevance of an action or situation.
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Up to your ears
To be extremely busy or deeply involved in a situation, often to the point of feeling overwhelmed.
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Same old, same old
This phrase refers to a situation or state of affairs that is uninteresting because it is so familiar and predictable.
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Forty winks
A short nap or brief period of sleep.
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Siesta
A short period of rest or sleep taken in the early afternoon, often after the midday meal, especially common in warm countries.
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Take a snooze
To take a short, light sleep or nap, typically during the day.
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Dozing off
To fall lightly asleep, often unintentionally and for a short period.
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Nap time
A designated period, especially for young children or adults needing rest, to sleep or rest briefly during the day.
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Nothing special
This phrase describes something that is ordinary, unremarkable, or average, lacking any unique or outstanding qualities.
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To live from hand to mouth
To have just enough money or food to survive on, without any surplus or savings for the future.
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Duty calls
One must attend to obligations or responsibilities immediately.
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A bother
Something that causes annoyance, trouble, or inconvenience.
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Away from my desk
Not physically present at one's usual workspace or workstation, typically indicating temporary unavailability.
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On a break
Temporarily suspended from work, a relationship, or an activity for a period of rest or reconsideration.
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Time crunch
A situation characterized by having very little time to complete a task or meet a deadline.
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From dawn till dusk
This phrase describes the entire period of daylight, from the very beginning of morning until night falls.
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From morning till night
This phrase describes something that occurs continuously throughout the entire day, from its beginning at dawn to its end in darkness.
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Round the clock
To do something continuously for 24 hours a day, without stopping.
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Day in, day out
Describing something that happens continuously and without variation, day after day.
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Staying up all night
To remain awake and active throughout the entire night, from evening until morning, without sleeping.
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Tied up
To be completely occupied or busy with something, rendering one unavailable, or to be physically restrained and bound.
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Everything's in order
All things are arranged correctly and systematically, or a situation is proceeding as expected without issues.
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Broke
Having absolutely no money, often temporarily, and unable to afford basic necessities or luxuries.
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It's your turn
This phrase indicates that it is now a particular person's opportunity, right, or responsibility to do something, often in a sequence.