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Write the meaning of given idioms and make 5 sentences from each.
Idiom: An idiom is a common phrase which means something different from its literal meaning but can be understood because of their popular use.
1. In black and white
2. Black sheep
3. to meet you halfway
4. to make both ends meet
5. won laurels
6. plays fast and loose
7. turning a deaf ear
8. by hook or by crook
9. to pay off old scores
10. on and off
11. put a spoke in wheel
12. at my fingers' ends
13. turned over a new leaf
14. call in question
15. through thick and thin
16. sitting on the fence
17. strained every nerve
18. at sixes and seven
19. hoping against hope
20. hit the nail on the head
21. nipped in bud
22. out of question
23. long and short of it
24. ended in smoke
25. left no stone unturned
26. ins and outs
27.beyond all question
28. out of question
29. at a stretch
30. fits and starts
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Answer:
- Every member of the race tries to provide them correct and prove the other one incorrect which lead the formation of the phrase "in black and white". It means that in real life situation it is not compulsory that one person is right and other person is wrong, maybe both are right at their own place.
- In the English language, black sheep is an idiom used to describe an odd or disreputable member of a group, especially within a family.
- COMMON If you meet someone halfway, you accept some of their opinions or wishes, so that you can come to an agreement with them or have a better relationship with them. Democrats are willing to meet the president halfway on measures to stimulate the economy.
- Meaning : To win honour. Usage : Anand is a very hard working boy, he is sure to win laurels in life.
- to behave in a clever and dishonest way —usually + withHe was accused of playing fast and loose with the truth.
- Refuse to listen, as in You can plead all day but he's turning a deaf ear to everyone. This expression dates from the first half of the 1400s and was in most proverb collections from 1546 on.
- By hook or by crook" is an English phrase meaning "by any means necessary", suggesting that any means possible should be taken to accomplish a goal. The phrase is very old, first recorded in the Middle English Controversial Tracts of John Wyclif in 1380.
- to harm someone because they have harmed you in the past: The president used his speech to settle some old scores with his opponents.
- informal. to make it difficult for someone to achieve something they had planned to do: His letter really put a spoke in our wheel.
Explanation:
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