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'A pain in the neck' refers to someone who...
 
is really annoying
 
has a pain in the neck
 
has a thick neck
“Even the sight of cheese turns my stomach! I don’t know why.”
 
Makes me feel nauseous.
 
Makes me feel excited.
 
Makes me feel nervous.
'As white as a sheet' refers to
 
someone who looks very pale, because of shock or illness.
 
someone who looks very pale, and therefore beautiful.
 
someone who looks like a white sheet.
'A new lease on life' refers to
 
any fresh start or positive change in circumstances.
 
recovering from a serious illness.
 
moving to a new apartment.
To have a 'spring in your step' means to...
 
be energetic and without worry.
 
have rubber soled shoes.
 
bounce around like a crazy person.
'A bitter pill to swallow' refers to...
 
having to accept a difficult situation, like failing an exam
 
a bitter pill to swallow.
 
attempting to commit suicide with a cyanide pill
'Under the knife' refers to
 
someone who is having surgery.
 
someone who is about to lose their job.
 
someone who is being threatened with a knife.
'Alive and kicking' originally referred to
 
the freshness of fish sold by fishmongers.
 
what happens to somebody who is executed by hanging.
 
a dance routine performed by Blackpink
In the phrase 'Over the hill', what is the hill?
 
Life's journey from birth to death.
 
A hill.
 
Another way to say 'ill'.
'round the bend' means
 
to be insane
 
to be fat
 
to be lost
The idiom 'on the mend' originally refers to
 
a repaired hole or rip in fabric.
 
a surgical operation.
 
someone who is recovering from an illness.
The first mention of the phrase 'you are what you eat' came from
 
a French writer in 1826
 
a cannibal in 1726
 
a fast food advertisement in 1976
'Kicking the habit' originally referred to...
 
the muscle spasms seen in heroin addicts during withdrawal
 
kicking the bucket
 
nuns quitting the church and going back to regular life.
The idiom 'under the weather' originates from...
 
sailors going to their cabins below deck during a storm.
 
the negative feelings we get during bad weather.
 
people feeling unwell.
'To have a frog in your throat' means...
 
to sound croaky like a frog.
 
to have a frog in your throat.
 
to have eaten frog's legs.
'On death's door' means
 
to be close to death.
 
to be carried on a door when dead.
 
to knock on a door at Halloween.
In the idiom 'As fit as a fiddle', the fiddle is another name for
 
a violin
 
a scam
 
a person who can't stay still
The idiom 'As sick as a parrot' comes from
 
a 1926 global epidemic spread by human contact with parrots
 
a 1963 horror movie in which sick parrots attack people
 
a 1971 comedy sketch about a dead parrot
He 'kicked the bucket' a few years ago means...
 
he died a few years ago.
 
he was able to kick his KFC addiction a few years ago.
 
he kicked a bucket a few years ago.