English, asked by hamza01326, 8 months ago

Write a coherent paragraph on the topic “Exam Phobia”.
You must use the following idioms in context but not the meaning of idioms. However, the meaning of idioms is given for sake of developing your in-depth understanding.
loom large: to be about to happen and so to be very important
cut one’s losses: to decide not to waste more time, effort etc. on something one has already spent time, effort etc.
chickens come home to roost: a situation in which past errors committed by somebody begin to have an advance effect on him/her
the pot calling the kettle black: used to describe someone who is criticizing another person for doing something that he/she does.
stay the pace: to maintain progress at the same rate as others
pie in the sky: hope of success or achievement which has very little or no chance of being fulfilled
in the soup: in serious trouble
make a pig’s ear of something: to do something very badly
above one’s head: too difficult for one to understand
pull a rabbit out of a hat: to produce a very pleasant surprise

Answers

Answered by BabyBold07
0

Answer:

hamza01326 avatar

hamza01326

31 seconds ago

English

Secondary School

+5 pts

Write a coherent paragraph on the topic “Exam Phobia”.

You must use the following idioms in context but not the meaning of idioms. However, the meaning of idioms is given for sake of developing your in-depth understanding.

loom large: to be about to happen and so to be very important

cut one’s losses: to decide not to waste more time, effort etc. on something one has already spent time, effort etc.

chickens come home to roost: a situation in which past errors committed by somebody begin to have an advance effect on him/her

the pot calling the kettle black: used to describe someone who is criticizing another person for doing something that he/she does.

stay the pace: to maintain progress at the same rate as others

pie in the sky: hope of success or achievement which has very little or no chance of being fulfilled

in the soup: in serious trouble

make a pig’s ear of something: to do something very badly

above one’s head: too difficult for one to understand

pull a rabbit out of a hat: to produce a very pleasant surprise

Explanation:

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