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This weeks lesson is all about idioms involving animals... raining cats and dogs monkeying around a dog eat dog world and every time I teach this lesson one of my examples reminds me of one of my favourite answers that I ever got, which I am sure I must have mentioned at the time. It's in the example __________ tears. where I am looking for the answer "crocodile tears" meaning "pretending to be sorry". Once in class a girl answered "fish tears". Intrigued, I asked her why and her answer was the lovely and quite poignant "because when a fish is sad, no one can see that it's crying". If that isn't a real idiom, it damn well should be. "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | ||
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And while I am on the subject, walking home after class it occurred to me how many "monkey" idioms there seem to be. monkey around make a monkey out of someone monkey see monkey do I'll be a monkey's uncle monkey wrench a barrel of monkeys a monkey (£500 in Uk slang) monkey business cheeky monkey a monkey on your back brass monkeys weather grease monkey pay peanuts, get monkeys softly softly catchee monkee monkey suit not give a monkeys an infinite number of monkeys a cartload of monkeys the organ grinder, not the monkey not my circus, not my monkeys freeze the balls off a brass monkey monkey bars... . . ... and of course... . . . spank the monkey. How many of these are used in the US? And do you know any more? "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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Wow - you are right. I hadn't thought of that before. | |||
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So, are there any there that are not used in the US? A friend on FB also suggested monkey nuts monkey puzzle tree welcome to the monkey house and monkey's paw. Any more ideas.This message has been edited. Last edited by: BobHale, "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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