English, asked by rajawatunnati, 9 months ago

I did not know the first word about them. explain the idiomatic expressions in the above sentence​

Answers

Answered by sharmaanupama741
0

Answer:

,☹️❣️❤️

Explanation:

☹️fu8ucyuysw toxd5stooe6dg0d

Answered by afsanaatia88
0

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VOCABULARY - IDIOMS

Idiomatic Expressions - List in Alphabetical Order

idioms

List of idioms in alphabetical order

A list of idioms arranged in alphabetical order (with definitions and examples.) For a list arranged in categories, click here

A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z

Learn English Idioms

A list of English idioms with definitions and examples:

a bad penny

The phrase a bad penny refers to a person or thing which is unpleasant, dishonorable, or unwanted that is likely to reappear, particularly at inconvenient times.

The phrase a bad penny is usually used in the proverb:

A bad penny always turns up.

The origin of the phrase

The phrase 'a bad penny always turns up' is a very old saying. It is worthwhile noting that pennies were ripe targets for counterfeiters. When people discovered that those counterfeited pennies had reached their pockets, the only solution available was to try to spend them as quickly as possible. But because everyone was trying to get rid of those 'bad pennies', the chance of encountering the very same one you had spent earlier was quite high. Accordingly, the phrase 'bad penny' became an expression referring to an unpopular or undesired thing or person that keeps reappearing.

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