#music π
Ronan Keating's extremely loving and smooth song "When You Say Nothing At All" is featured on the film "Notting Hill". Have a listen. You'll be singing along in no time.
Ronan Keating's extremely loving and smooth song "When You Say Nothing At All" is featured on the film "Notting Hill". Have a listen. You'll be singing along in no time.
English for Tomorrow
#idiom #upperintermediate @englishfortomorrow
ππ»Definition : A phrase that is used when you are looking for something that is very hard to find, or when you are unlikely to succeed in a search!
ππ»Example: 1) Getting a good, cheap meal in New York is like finding a needle in a haystack.
2) The movie theater was so crowded that getting a seat was like finding a needle in a haystack.
ππ»Etymology: A 'needle' is a very small tool used to sew cloth, and if a needle were sitting in a stack of 'hay' (cut grass), it would be very hard to find.
ππ»Example: 1) Getting a good, cheap meal in New York is like finding a needle in a haystack.
2) The movie theater was so crowded that getting a seat was like finding a needle in a haystack.
ππ»Etymology: A 'needle' is a very small tool used to sew cloth, and if a needle were sitting in a stack of 'hay' (cut grass), it would be very hard to find.
English for Tomorrow
#quiz #vocabulary @englishfortomorrow
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English for Tomorrow
Here is the respose
π ALSO : ππ»X noun
used instead of saying the name of a person or place when you do not know it, or when you are using them as an example
ππ»so-and-so noun
(informal) used for referring to someone whose name you do not know. You can refer to a thing whose name you do not know as such-and-such
ππ»widget noun
(informal) a small object or piece of equipment that you do not know the name of
ππ»doodah noun
(British informal) used for referring to something that you cannot remember the name of
ππ»whatchamacallit noun
(spoken) a word that you use for referring to something when you cannot remember what it is called
ππ»whatsername pronoun
(spoken) a word that you use for referring to a woman whose name you cannot remember
ππ»whatsisname pronoun
(spoken) a word that you use for referring to a man whose name you cannot remember
ππ»thingy noun
(spoken) used for referring to something when you do not know or cannot remember the name of it
ππ»whatsit noun
(British spoken) a word that you use for referring to an object when you cannot remember what it is called
ππ»thingy noun
(spoken) used for referring to someone whose name you do not know or cannot remember
used instead of saying the name of a person or place when you do not know it, or when you are using them as an example
ππ»so-and-so noun
(informal) used for referring to someone whose name you do not know. You can refer to a thing whose name you do not know as such-and-such
ππ»widget noun
(informal) a small object or piece of equipment that you do not know the name of
ππ»doodah noun
(British informal) used for referring to something that you cannot remember the name of
ππ»whatchamacallit noun
(spoken) a word that you use for referring to something when you cannot remember what it is called
ππ»whatsername pronoun
(spoken) a word that you use for referring to a woman whose name you cannot remember
ππ»whatsisname pronoun
(spoken) a word that you use for referring to a man whose name you cannot remember
ππ»thingy noun
(spoken) used for referring to something when you do not know or cannot remember the name of it
ππ»whatsit noun
(British spoken) a word that you use for referring to an object when you cannot remember what it is called
ππ»thingy noun
(spoken) used for referring to someone whose name you do not know or cannot remember
English for Tomorrow
#idiom #advanced @englishfortomorrow
βοΈThe idiom βthe best thing since sliced breadβ means that something new is the best and most useful innovation or development invented for a long time.
ππ»Example of use: βIβve bought a new touchscreen computer, itβs the greatest thing since sliced bread, I canβt believe I ever worked without itβ.
ππ»Example of use: βIβve bought a new touchscreen computer, itβs the greatest thing since sliced bread, I canβt believe I ever worked without itβ.
English for Tomorrow
#Song #intermediate @englishfortomorrow
A nursery Rhyme! βοΈ"Eeny, meeny, miny, moe", which can be spelled a number of ways, is a children's counting rhyme, used to select a person in games such as tag. It is one of a large group of similar 'counting-out rhymes' where the child who is pointed to by the chanter on the last syllable is 'counted out'. The rhyme has existed in various forms since well before 1820,[1] and is common in many languages with similar-sounding nonsense syllables.
Since many similar counting rhymes existed earlier, it is difficult to ascertain this rhyme's exact origin.
Since many similar counting rhymes existed earlier, it is difficult to ascertain this rhyme's exact origin.
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#quiz @englishfortomorrow Does this picture remind you of any idiom in English? If you don't know Stay Alert until we give you the answer!