Thursday, June 5, 2014

Horsing around

Idiom: "horsing around"

Example:
Mariela:  Minami, you really should pay more attention in your Idioms class. I don’t think you pay attention in class, you are always horsing around.
Minami: Horsing around? I don’t have a horse! I don’t even know how to ride a horse.  I take the bus everywhere I go!
Mariela: No, silly. Horsing around means goofing around and not paying attention.
Minami: Okay, you are right. I really need to stop chatting with Bruno and Sylvia in Idioms class and need to start paying attention to what the teacher says.  

Meaning: "horsing around" means to be goofing around, playing around. Not paying attention.

For more information, please visit www.languagesystems.edu

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Beating a dead horse

Idiom: “Beating a dead horse”



Example:

Minami:  Hey there Mariela.  I heard you were talking to Joyce about politics yesterday, and you told her to “stop beating a dead horse”.  I mean I don’t know much about politics, but I can’t imagine anyone wanting to do something as cruel as that!  Why would she beat a dead horse?  That’s horrible!
Mariela:  Minami, you silly goose!  “Beating a dead horse” is an English idiom.
Minami:  Really?  That’s pretty strange.  What the heck does it mean?
Mariela:  It means repeating something over and over again, trying to make your point in so many different ways that it becomes totally obvious.
Minami:  Oh, I think I get it.  I just don’t understand why English idioms use so many references to animals.  They are very confusing to me! 

Meaning: "Beating a dead horse" is a common idiom has nothing to do with cruelty to animals, dead or alive, but simply means to make your point over and over again ad nauseam!  (Basically, this means to keep explaining and giving examples about something to the point of making your audience sick to their stomachs!).

For more information, please visit www.languagesystems.edu