Want to feel like a native English speaker? One of the fastest ways is by mastering everyday English idioms — those phrases native speakers use without thinking. This guide offers over 200 idioms, categorized by theme, with explanations, example sentences, pronunciation notes, common mistakes, and variant forms. Use them well and you’ll sound fluent, natural, and confident.
Why Idioms Matter
Idioms are used constantly in conversation, media, business, and writing.
They carry meaning beyond literal words.
Knowing them helps you understand jokes, songs, movies, and informal speech.
Using them makes your English more natural, less textbooky.
1. Idioms for Daily Life & Conversation
Idiom
Meaning
Example
break the ice
make people feel comfortable
“A joke helped break the ice at the meeting.”
hit the sack
go to sleep
“I’m tired—time to hit the sack.”
call it a day
stop working
“We’ve done enough; let’s call it a day.”
pull somebody’s leg
tease someone
“Relax, I was just pulling your leg.”
up in the air
undecided
“Plans are still up in the air.”
kick the bucket
die (informal)
“He’s worried he’ll kick the bucket soon.”
cost an arm and a leg
very expensive
“That car cost an arm and a leg.”
the ball is in your court
it’s your turn to act
“I’ve done my part; the ball is in your court.”
go the extra mile
make special effort
“She always goes the extra mile for clients.”
on the same page
agree, share understanding
“Are we on the same page about the project?”
2. Idioms for Work, Business & Office
Idiom
Meaning
Example
think outside the box
be creative
“We need to think outside the box on this campaign.”
touch base
make contact briefly
“Let’s touch base tomorrow about status.”
move the needle
make significant progress
“This marketing strategy will move the needle.”
get the ball rolling
start something
“Let’s get the ball rolling on this contract.”
in the driver’s seat
in control
“After the merger she was in the driver’s seat.”
back to the drawing board
start over
“The proposal failed; back to the drawing board.”
give someone a heads up
warn someone
“I’ll give you a heads up if there’s a change.”
square the circle
attempt the impossible
“Trying to satisfy all stakeholders is like squaring the circle.”
pick up the slack
do extra because someone else didn’t
“I’ll pick up the slack while you’re away.”
hit the ground running
start energetically
“New employees must hit the ground running.”
3. Idioms for Emotions & Reactions
Idiom
Meaning
Example
over the moon
very happy
“She was over the moon after the promotion.”
down in the dumps
sad
“He’s been down in the dumps since last week.”
on cloud nine
extremely happy
“Winning that game put him on cloud nine.”
have a chip on one’s shoulder
feel angry or resentful
“He has a chip on his shoulder about being overlooked.”
lose one’s cool
get upset
“He lost his cool in the meeting.”
bite one’s tongue
stop from speaking
“I wanted to respond but bit my tongue.”
cry over spilled milk
regret something that’s done
“We can’t change it; don’t cry over spilled milk.”
blow off steam
release anger/stress
“He went for a run to blow off steam.”
go bananas
become crazy/excited
“The crowd went bananas at the concert.”
let the cat out of the bag
reveal a secret
“She let the cat out of the bag about the surprise.”
4. Idioms for Time, Opportunity & Change
Idiom
Meaning
Example
a blessing in disguise
good thing that seemed bad
“Losing that job was a blessing in disguise.”
every cloud has a silver lining
good part in bad situation
“Every cloud has a silver lining – you’ll learn from it.”
in the blink of an eye
very quickly
“The accident happened in the blink of an eye.”
once in a blue moon
very rarely
“We meet once in a blue moon these days.”
time flies
time passes quickly
“Time flies when you’re having fun.”
turn over a new leaf
start fresh
“He decided to turn over a new leaf.”
seize the day
make the most of now
“Let’s seize the day and start now!”
change of heart
change in attitude
“He had a change of heart and apologized.”
live on borrowed time
expected to die/cease soon
“He’s living on borrowed time after the diagnosis.”
hit the jackpot
succeed greatly
“They hit the jackpot with that investment.”
5. Idioms for Money, Business & Value
Idiom
Meaning
Example
break even
no profit, no loss
“This quarter we just broke even.”
pay the piper
face the consequences
“We didn’t follow procedure—time to pay the piper.”
cash cow
steady income source
“Software licences are our cash cow.”
bottom line
most important point
“The bottom line is we need more revenue.”
go belly up
fail financially
“The company went belly up.”
raise the bar
set higher standard
“This proposal raises the bar.”
throw money at something
solve by spending
“You can’t just throw money at the problem.”
buy time
delay to prepare
“We need to buy time before answering.”
feather one’s nest
enrich oneself
“He was accused of feathering his nest.”
cut one’s losses
stop more losses
“We cut our losses and exited the market.”
6. Idioms for Travel, Movement & Distance
Idiom
Meaning
Example
hit the road
start a journey
“Let’s hit the road early tomorrow.”
off the beaten track
away from usual places
“The hotel is off the beaten track.”
jump the gun
start early
“He jumped the gun with the announcement.”
get the ball rolling
(see work)
“Let’s get the ball rolling on the tour.”
on the right track
doing things correctly
“We’re finally on the right track.”
crossroads
point of decision
“She reached a crossroads in her career.”
roadblock
obstacle
“Funding was a major roadblock.”
run out of steam
get tired/lose energy
“The project ran out of steam after six months.”
a long shot
unlikely possibility
“It’s a long shot but worth trying.”
follow suit
do the same as others
“When my friends quit, I followed suit.”
7. Idioms for Health, Body & Well-being
Idiom
Meaning
Example
under the weather
somewhat ill
“I’m feeling under the weather today.”
fit as a fiddle
very healthy
“He’s fit as a fiddle at age 70.”
on one’s last leg
near collapse
“The car’s on its last leg.”
break a sweat
start working hard
“We didn’t even break a sweat.”
catch one’s breath
pause to recover
“I stopped running to catch my breath.”
a clean bill of health
perfect health report
“He got a clean bill of health.”
elephant in the room
obvious issue ignored
“We need to talk about the elephant in the room.”
raise the roof
make loud noise (celebration)
“Fans raised the roof at the game.”
shake a leg
hurry up
“Come on, shake a leg!”
drop like flies
many people fall ill/hurt quickly
“Workers dropped like flies during the heatwave.”
8. Idioms for Life, Culture & Values
Idiom
Meaning
Example
bite the bullet
accept something difficult
“I decided to bite the bullet and quit.”
burn the midnight oil
work late
“He burned the midnight oil before the exam.”
by the book
follow rules exactly
“She did everything by the book.”
clean slate
fresh start
“He starts with a clean slate.”
hit the nail on the head
describe exactly right
“You hit the nail on the head with that answer.”
keep one’s chin up
stay positive
“Keep your chin up during tough times.”
read between the lines
understand hidden meaning
“He knows how to read between the lines.”
sit on the fence
avoid deciding
“She’s sitting on the fence about moving.”
spill the beans
reveal secret
“He spilled the beans about the surprise.”
twist someone’s arm
persuade someone
“I didn’t want to go but he twisted my arm.”
9. Idioms for Food, Drink & Eating
Idiom
Meaning
Example
bite off more than you can chew
take on too much
“He bit off more than he could chew.”
bring home the bacon
earn a living
“She brings home the bacon at her job.”
cream of the crop
best of the best
“He’s the cream of the crop.”
bad egg
bad person
“He’s a bad egg — can’t trust him.”
couch potato
someone who watches a lot of TV
“Stop being a couch potato.”
packed like sardines
very crowded
“The bus was packed like sardines.”
lemon
faulty product/car
“That car turned out to be a lemon.”
go bananas
get excited/angry
“Everyone went bananas at the concert.”
egg on one’s face
embarrassed
“He ended up with egg on his face.”
spill the beans
(listed above)
“They spilled the beans about the merger.”
10. Practice, Variants & Regional Differences
Many idioms have US vs UK differences: “take a rain check” (US) vs “ask for a rain check” (UK)
Some idioms evolve: “cutting-edge” vs “bleeding-edge”
Using idioms correctly means: right context + right audience
Don’t overuse idioms — they lose effect
Some idioms confuse non-native speakers because the literal meaning is very different from the idiomatic meaning
Example variant:
“kick the bucket” = die UK version: “pop your clogs” (very informal, not for all learners)
11. Mistakes Learners Often Make With Idioms
Translating directly from native language — often incorrect
Using the wrong prepositions: “on the same page about” vs “on the same page with”
Mixing metaphors: “We need to hit two birds with one stone” → incorrect mixing: “hit two flies with one hammer”
Formal context misuse: “He let the cat out of the bag” in a formal board meeting may sound informal
Using outdated idioms without knowing tone: “gosh-darn” etc
12. How to Practice Idioms Effectively
Pick 3 idioms per week and make sentences with them
Use them in conversation or writing immediately
Watch English TV shows or movies and note idioms
Keep an idiom journal: write the idiom, meaning, example, variation
Test yourself: say the idiom, ask yourself the meaning, then write a new example
Join language-exchange chats and try using one or two idioms in each session
Yak’s Final Chewables
Mastering everyday English idioms unlocks a huge part of the language that textbooks often skip. With over 200 idioms in this article, you now have the tools to understand, use, and enjoy natural English expressions—whether in conversation, writing, business or travel. Use them wisely, practice often, and your English will shift from textbook to talk-of-the-town. Even a yak in a herd can drop an idiom and sound fluent.