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Health related idioms

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  • 'Under the knife' refers to
    someone who is about to lose their job.
    someone who is having surgery.
    someone who is being threatened with a knife.
  • “Even the sight of cheese turns my stomach! I don’t know why.”
    Makes me feel nervous.
    Makes me feel excited.
    Makes me feel bad.
  • The idiom 'As sick as a parrot' comes from
    a 1971 comedy sketch about a dead parrot
    a 1963 horror movie in which sick parrots attack people
    a 1926 global epidemic spread by human contact with parrots
  • 'On death's door' means
    to be carried on a door when dead.
    to be close to death.
    to knock on a door at Halloween.
  • 'A pain in the neck' refers to someone who...
    has a pain in their neck
    has a piano on their head.
    is really annoying
  • 'round the bend' means
    to be lost
    to be fat
    to be crazy
  • A catch 22 situation is one where...
    Two of the possible outcomes are good and two are bad.
    Whatever choice you make, the result will be bad.
    You can break a bad habit by not doing it for 22 days
  • 'A bitter pill to swallow' refers to...
    attempting to kill yourself with a poison pill.
    having to accept a difficult situation, like failing an exam
    a bitter pill to swallow.
  • 'As white as a sheet' refers to
    someone who looks very pale, and therefore beautiful.
    someone who looks very pale, because of shock or illness.
    someone who looks like a white sheet.
  • He 'kicked the bucket' a few years ago means...
    he kicked a bucket a few years ago.
    he died a few years ago.
    he was able to kick his KFC addiction a few years ago.
  • 'To have a frog in your throat' means...
    to have a frog in your throat.
    to have eaten frog's legs.
    to sound croaky like a frog.
  • To be between a rock and a hard place
    To be between a rock and a hard place.
    To have no good way out of a difficult situation.
    To be crushed to death.
  • The idiom 'under the weather' originates from...
    people feeling unwell.
    sailors going to their cabins below deck during a storm.
    the negative feelings we get during bad weather.
  • In the phrase 'Over the hill', what is the hill?
    A hill.
    Life's journey from birth to death.
    Another way to say 'ill'.