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Clothes idioms

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  • Hat / cap in hand
    being very humble, usually asking for a favour or apologising for something bad you have done
  • Dressed to the nines/dressed to kill
    wearing nice clothes for a special occasion. Another idiom with a similar meaning is “dolled up”, or “gussied up”
  • Thinking cap
    if you put on your thinking cap, you think seriously about something
  • Hot under the collar
    very angry about something
  • Roll up your sleeves
    to prepare for hard work
  • An ace up your sleeve
    a secret plan, idea, or advantage that can be used if and when it is needed. The expression comes from card games, where the “ace” is usually the highest card
  • Off the cuff
    if you speak off the cuff, you say something without having prepared or thought about your words first
  • Caught with your pants down
    to be completely surprised by something because you are not prepared for it. The idiom is similar to “caught red-handed”
  • Below the belt
    something, for example, a remark, that is very insulting and unfair. The expression comes from boxing, where it is illegal to hit an opponent below the belt
  • Fine-tooth comb
    if you go through something with a fine-tooth comb, you examine it very carefully
  • Tighten your belt
    to spend less money than you did before
  • Walk a mile in someone’s shoes
    you should try to understand someone before criticising them. The full idiom is: Before you judge someone, walk a mile in their shoes
  • Birthday suit
    if you are in your birthday suit, you are not wearing any clothes. This refers to the fact that people are naked when they are born
  • Kid gloves
    if you treat someone with kid gloves, you deal with them very gently or carefully
  • Dirty laundry
    questionable activities that one wants to keep secret. “To wash your dirty laundry/linen in public” or to “air your dirty laundry/linen in public”