be a piece of cake: be very easy.
A: "I don't believe what Bob said. Why is he bad-mouthing me?"
B: "He's probably jealous of your success."
A: "Bob said the test was difficult, but I thought it was a piece of cake.""
be all ears: be eager to hear what someone has to say.be broke: be without money.
A: "I just got an e-mail message from our old friend Sally."
B: "Tell me what she said. I'm all ears!"be fed up with (with someone or something): be out of patience (with someone or something);
"No, I can't lend you ten dollars. I'm completely broke until payday."
be very tired of someone or something.be in and out: be at and away from a place during a particular time.
"Bill, you're too careless with your work. I'm fed up with
apologizing for your mistakes!"be on the go: be very busy (going from one thing or project to another).
"Could we postpone our meeting until tomorrow? I expect to
be in and out of the office most of the day today."be on the road: be traveling.
"I'm really tired. I've been on the go all week long."be over: be finished; end.
"You won't be able to contact me tomorrow because I'll be on the road."be up and running: (for a technological process) be operational; be ready to use .
"I can't see you until around 4 o'clock. My meetings won't be over until then."be used to (/noun): be accustomed to; not uncomfortable with.
"Dave's ESL Cafe on the Web has been up and running since December 1995."beat: exhausted; very tired (adj.).
"It won't be hard to get up at 5:00 AM. I'm used to getting up early."beat around the bush: evade an issue; avoid giving a direct answer.
"This has been a long day. I'm beat!"beat one's brains out: try very hard to understand or do something.
"Quit beating around the bush! If you don't want to go with me, just tell me!"Beats me: I have no idea.
"Can you help me with this problem? I've been beating my brains out with it,
but I just can't solve it."before long: soon.
A: "What time's the party?"
B: "Beats me!"bent out of shape: needlessly worried about something.
A: "I'm really tired of working."
B: "Just be patient. The weekend will be here before long."bite off more than one can chew: take responsibility for more than one can manage.
"I know you're worried about your job interview, but don't get bent out of shape.
You'll do just fine."blabbermouth: a very talkative person--especially one who says things that should be kept secret.
"I'm really behind with my project. Can you help me? I'm afraid I
bit off more than I could chew!"blow one's top: become extremely angry.
"Don't say anything to Bob unless you want the whole office to know.
Bob's quite a blabbermouth."boom box: portable cassette/CD player.
A: "Was your father upset when you came home at 3 AM?"
B: "He was more than upset. He blew his top!"the bottom line: the most essential information.
"Don't forget to bring your boom box to the picnic!"Break a leg!: Good luck!
"The discussion lasted many hours. The bottom line was that
the XYZ Company isn't for sale."break someone's heart: make someone feel very disappointed/discouraged/sad.
"I understand you have a job interview tomorrow. Break a leg!"broke: without money.
"Joe broke his mother's heart when he dropped out of school."buck(s): dollar(s).
A: "Can you lend me 10 dollars?"
B: "I'm afraid not. I'm broke."bug: annoy; bother.
"The cheapest tickets for the concert cost 25 bucks. Do you still want to go?"bull-headed: stubborn; inflexible.
"I'm trying to concentrate! Don't bug me!"a bundle: a lot of money.
"Don't be so bull-headed. Why can't you admit that others' opinions are just as good as yours?"burn the midnight oil: study/work all night or until very, very late at night.
A: "Your new car is really nice."
B: "It should be. It cost me a bundle!"bushed: very tired; exhausted.
"I'm not ready for the test tomorrow. I guess I'll have to
burn the the midnight oil."by oneself: alone and without help.
"I'm going to lie down for a while. I'm really bushed."by the skin of one's teeth: barely succeed in doing something.
"I can't do this by myself. Can you help me?"
"I'll have to start earlier the next time. This time I only finished by the skin of my teeth."
These are nice examples, but I see they are from another site. It's essential that when you bring content from another source that you give appropriate credit and we're violating their copyright. These are from ESL Cafe, and perhaps other places as well.
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