Idiom of the day :- In the bag

Idiom of the day :- In the bag

Usage, examples and definition of the Idiom :-

‘If I do well on my examination, my promotion will be in the bag,’ Steven said. He is saying that his promotion is assured. It is a certainty. ‘There can be no doubt about it. Once you have been promoted, your future in the company will be in the bag,’ his father smiled.

Idiom of the day :- All rolled into one

Idiom of the day :- All rolled into one

Usage, examples and definition of the Idiom :-

Charles is handsome, intelligent, talented, clever and witty. He’s what some would say would be the perfect man all rolled into one. That is to say, he’s a combination of things which, when viewed together, form a single — and complete — unit.’You, my dear, are greatness and beauty all rolled into one,’ Charles whispered to Sylvia.

Idiom of the day :- Every inch

Idiom of the day :- Every inch

Usage, examples and definition of the Idiom :-

Shakespeare used this expression in King Lear. It means ‘totally, completely, in every way’. ‘He is every inch a king,’ Lear said. ‘I am every inch a believer in freedom,’ the teacher said. ‘You are every inch lovely lady,’ Betsy’s mother smiled.

Idiom of the day :- Easy-going

Idiom of the day :- Easy-going

Usage, examples and definition of the Idiom :-

Tolerant; laid-back; relaxed. ex. “Bill is one the most easy-going guys that I know. He never gets upset about anything.” 

Idiom of the day :- Beg the question

Idiom of the day :- Beg the question

Usage, examples and definition of the Idiom :-

If I were to ask someone a question and he or she failed to answer it or replied with lots of words which still failed to be a reply, he or she would be begging the question. When I asked the boss for a holiday, he begged the question by telling me he was too busy to talk about it.’

Idiom of the day :- Fight / tilt at windmills

Idiom of the day :- Fight / tilt at windmills

Usage, examples and definition of the Idiom :-

‘Ha, there you are again making threatening gestures at me !’ Aaron cried. ‘I’ll show you that you are not fighting windmills !’ To fight or tilt at windmills is from the novel Don Quixote de la Mancha in which the hero attacks windmills thinking they are giants. The idiom means to struggle against an imaginary opponent or tooppose things that are not important.

Idiom of the day :- Back to square one

Idiom of the day :- Back to square one

Usage, examples and definition of the Idiom :-

Also: Back to the drawing board; Said when you fail to make something work, and have to start over again from the beginning. ex: “Well, that didn’t work. Back to square one.” Having to start all over again.