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Idiom list (F)
~ F ~
- Face like thunder
- If someone has a face like thunder, they are clearly very angry or upset about something.
- Face only a mother could love
- When someone has a face only a mother could love, they are ugly.
- Face the music
- If you have to face the music, you have to accept the negative consequences of something you have done wrong.
- Face value
- If you take something at face value, you accept the appearance rather than looking deeper into the matter.
- Face your demons
- If you face your demons, you confront your fears or something that you have been trying hard to avoid.
- Facts of life
- When someone is taught the facts of life, they learn about sex and reproduction.
- Failure is the mother of success
- Failure is often a stepping stone towards success.
- Faint heart never won fair lady
- This means that you will not get the partner of your dreams if you lack the confidence to let them know how you feel.
- Fair and square
- If someone wins something fair and square, they follow the rules and win conclusively.
- Fair crack of the whip
- (UK) If everybody has a fair crack of the whip, they all have equal opportunities to do something.
- Fair shake of the whip
- (USA) If everybody has a fair shake of the whip, they all have equal opportunities to do something.
- Fair thee well
- Meaning completely and fully: I am tied up today to a fair-thee-well.
- Fairweather friend
- A fairweather friend is the type who is always there when times are good but forgets about you when things get difficult or problems crop up.
- Fall by the wayside
- To fall by the wayside is to give up or fail before completion.
- Fall from grace
- If a person falls from grace, they lose favor with someone.
- Fall off the back of a lorry
- (UK) If someone tries to sell you something that has fallen of the back of a lorry, they are trying to sell you stolen goods.
- Fall off the turnip truck
- (USA) If someone has just fallen off the turnip truck, they are uninformed, naive and gullible. (Often used in the negative)
- Fall off the wagon
- If someone falls off the wagon, they start drinking after having given up completely for a time.
- Fall on our feet
- If you fall on your feet, you succeed in doing something where there was a risk of failure.
- Fall on your sword
- If someone falls on their sword, they resign or accept the consequences of some wrongdoing.
- Familiarity breeds contempt
- This means that the more you know something or someone, the more you start to find faults and dislike things about it or them.
- Famous last words
- This expression is used as a way of showing disbelief, rejection or self-deprecation.'They said we had no chance of winning- famous last words!'
- Fast and furious
- Things that happen fast and furious happen very quickly without stopping or pausing.
- Fat cat
- A fat cat is a person who makes a lot of money and enjoys a privileged position in society.
- Fat chance!
- This idiom is a way of telling someone they have no chance.
- Fat head
- A fat head is a dull, stupid person.
- Fat hits the fire
- When the fat hits the fire, trouble breaks out.
- Fat of the land
- Living off the fat of the land means having the best of everything in life.
- Fate worse than death
- Describing something as a fate worse than death is a fairly common way of implying that it is unpleasant.
- Feast today, famine tomorrow
- If you indulge yourself with all that you have today, you may have to go without tomorrow.
- Feather in your cap
- A success or achievement that may help you in the future is a feather in your cap.
- Feather your own nest
- If someone feathers their own nest, they use their position or job for personal gain.
- Feathers fly
- When people are fighting or arguing angrily, we can say that feathers are flying.
- Fed up to the back teeth
- When you are extremely irritated and fed up with something or someone, you are fed up to the back teeth.
- Feel at home
- If you feel relaxed and comfortable somewhere or with someone, you feel at home.
- Feel free
- If you ask for permission to do something and are told to feel free, the other person means that there is absolutely no problem
- Feel like a million
- If you feel like a million, you are feeling very well (healthy) and happy.
- Feel the pinch
- If someone is short of money or feeling restricted in some other way, they are feeling the pinch.
- Feeling blue
- If you feel blue, you are feeling unwell, mainly associated with depression or unhappiness.
- Feet of clay
- If someone has feet of clay, they have flaws that make them seem more human and like normal people.
- Feet on the ground
- A practical and realistic person has their feet on the ground.
- Fence sitter
- Someone that try to support both side of an argument without committing to either is a fence sitter.
- Fever pitch
- When a situation has reached fever pitch, people are extremely excited or agitated.
- Few and far between
- If things are few and far between, they happen very occasionally.
- Fiddle while Rome burns
- If people are fiddling while Rome burns, they are wasting their time on futile things while problems threaten to destroy them.
- Fifth columnist
- (UK) A fifth columnist is a member of a subversive organisation who tries to help an enemy invade.
- Fifth wheel
- (USA) A fifth wheel is something unnecessary or useless.
- Fight an uphill battle
- When you fight an uphill battle, you have to struggle against very unfavourable circumstances.
- Fight tooth and nail
- If someone will fight tooth and nail for something, they will not stop at anything to get what they want. ('Fight tooth and claw' is an alternative.)
- Fighting chance
- If you have a fighting chance, you have a reasonable possibility of success.
- Find your feet
- When you are finding your feet, you are in the process of gaining confidence and experience in something.
- Fine and dandy
- (UK) If thing's are fine and dandy, then everything is going well.
- Fine tuning
- Small adjustments to improve something or to get it working are called fine tuning.
- Fine words butter no parsnips
- This idiom means that it's easy to talk, but talk is not action.
- Finger in the pie
- If you have a finger in the pie, you have an interest in something.
- Fingers and thumbs
- If you are all fingers and thumbs, you are being clumsy and not very skilled with your hands.
- Fire away
- If you want to ask someone a question and they tell you to fire away, they mean that you are free to ask what you want.
- Fire in the hole!
- This is used as a warning when a planned explosion is about to happen.
- Fire on all cylinders
- If something is firing on all cylinders, it is going as well as it could.
- First come, first served
- This means there will be no preferential treatment and a service will be provided to those that arrive first.
- First out of the gate
- When someone is first out of the gate, they are the first to do something that others are trying to do.
- First port of call
- The first place you stop to do something is your first port of call.
- Fish in troubled waters
- Someone who fishes in troubled waters tries to takes advantage of a shaky or unstable situation. The extremists were fishing in troubled waters during the political uncertainty in the country.
- Fish or cut bait
- (USA) This idiom is used when you want to tell someone that it is time to take action.
- Fish out of water
- If you are placed in a situation that is completely new to you and confuses you, you are like a fish out of water.
- Fishy
- If there is something fishy about someone or something, there is something suspicious; a feeling that there is something wrong, though it isn't clear what it is.
- Fit as a butcher's dog
- Someone who's very healthy, fit or physically attractive is as fit as a butcher's dog.
- Fit as a fiddle
- If you are fit as a fiddle, you are in perfect health.
- Fit for a king
- If something is fit for a king, it is of the very highest quality or standard.
- Fit like a glove
- If something fits like a glove, it is suitable or the right size.
- Fit of pique
- If someone reacts badly because their pride is hurt, this is a fit of pique.
- Fit the bill
- If something fits the bill, it is what is required for the task.
- Fit to be tied
- If someone is fit to be tied, they are extremely angry.
- Five o'clock shadow
- A five o'clock shadow is the facial hair that a man gets if he doesn't shave for a day or two.
- Flash in the pan
- If something is a flash in the pan, it is very noticeable but doesn't last long, like most singers, who are very successful for a while, then forgotten.
- Flat as a pancake
- It is so flat that it is like a pancake- there is no head on that beer it is as flat as a pancake.
- Flat out
- If you work flat out, you work as hard and fast as you possibly can.
- Fleet of foot
- If someone is fleet of foot, they are very quick.
- Flesh and blood
- Your flesh and blood are your blood relatives, especially your immediate family.
- Flogging a dead horse
- (UK) If someone is trying to convince people to do or feel something without any hope of succeeding, they're flogging a dead horse. This is used when someone is trying to raise interest in an issue that no-one supports anymore; beating a dead horse will not make it do any more work.
- Flowery speech
- Flowery speech is full of lovely words, but may well lack substance.
- Fly by the seat of one's pants
- If you fly by the seat of one's pants, you do something difficult even though you don't have the experience or training required.
- Fly in the ointment
- A fly in the ointment is something that spoils or prevents complete enjoyment of something.
- Fly off the handle
- If someone flies off the handle, they get very angry.
- Fly on the wall
- If you are able to see and hear events as they happen, you are a fly on the wall.
- Fly the coop
- When children leave home to live away from their parents, they fly the coop.
- Fly the flag
- If someone flies the flag, they represent or support their country. ('Wave the flag' and 'show the flag' are alternative forms of this idiom)
- Foam at the mouth
- If you foam at the mouth, you are very, very angry.
- Follow your nose
- When giving directions, telling someone to follow their nose means that they should go straight ahead.
- Food for thought
- If something is food for thought, it is worth thinking about or considering seriously.
- Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me
- This means that you should learn from your mistakes and not allow people to take advantage of you repeatedly.
- Fools rush in where angels fear to tread
- This idiom is used where people who are inexperienced or lack knowledge do something that more informed people would avoid.
- Foot in mouth
- This is used to describe someone who has just said something embarrassing, inappropriate, wrong or stupid.
- Foot in the door
- If you have or get your foot in the door, you start working in a company or organisation at a low level, hoping that you will be able to progress from there.
- Foot the bill
- The person who foots the bill pays the bill for everybody.
- Football's a game of two halves
- (UK) If something's a game of two halves, it means that it's possible for someone's fortunes or luck to change and the person who's winning could end up a loser.
- For a song
- If you buy or sell something for a song, it is very cheap.
- For donkey's years
- (UK) If people have done something, usually without much if any change, for an awfully long time, they can be said to have done it for donkey's years.
- For England
- (UK) A person who talks for England, talks a lot- if you do something for England, you do it a lot or to the limit.
- For kicks
- If you do something for kicks, or just for kicks, you do it purely for fun or thrills.
- For my money
- This idiom means 'in my opinion'.
- For Pete's sake
- This is used as an exclamation to show exasperation or irritation.
- For the birds
- If something is worthless or ridiculous, it is for the birds.
- For the love of Pete
- Usually used in exasperation, as in 'Oh, for the love of Pete!'
- For the time being
- For the time being indicates that an action or state will continue into the future, but is temporary. I'm sharing an office for the time being.
- Forbidden fruit
- Something enjoyable that is illegal or immoral is forbidden fruit.
- Foregone conclusion
- If the result of, say, a football match is a foregone conclusion, then the result is obvious before the game has even begun.
- Forest for the trees
- (USA) If someone can't see the forest for the trees, they get so caught up in small details that they fail to understand the bigger picture.
- Fortune knocks once at every man's door
- Everyone gets one good chance in a lifetime.
- Foul play
- If the police suspect foul play, they think a crime was committed.
- Four corners of the earth
- If something goes to, or comes from, the four corners of the earth, it goes or comes absolutely everywhere.
- Four-eyes
- A person who wears glasses
- Four-square behind
- If someone stands four-square behind someone, they give that person their full support.
- Fourth estate
- This is an idiomatic way of describing the media, especially the newspapers.
- Free rein
- If someone has a free rein, they have the authority to make the decisions they want without any restrictions. ('Free reign' is a common mistake.)
- Free-for-all
- A free-for-all is a fight or contest in which everyone gets involved and rules are not respected.
- French leave
- To take French leave is to leave a gathering without saying goodbye or without permission.
- Fresh from the oven
- If something is fresh from the oven, it is very new.
- Freudian Slip
- If someone makes a Freudian slip, they accidentally use the wrong word, but in doing so reveal what they are really thinking rather than what they think the other person wants to hear.
- Friendly footing
- When relationships are on a friendly footing, they are going well.
- Frog in my throat
- If you have a frog in your throat, you can't speak or you are losing your voice because you have a problem with your throat.
- From a different angle
- If you look at something from a different angle, you look at it from a different point of view.
- From Missouri
- (USA) If someone is from Missouri, then they require clear proof before they will believe something.
- From pillar to post
- If something is going from pillar to post, it is moving around in a meaningless way, from one disaster to another.
- From rags to riches
- Someone who starts life very poor and makes a fortune goes from rags to riches.
- From scratch
- This idiom means 'from the beginning'.
- From soup to nuts
- If you do something from soup to nuts, you do it from the beginning right to the very end.
- From the bottom of your heart
- If someone does something from the bottom of their heart, then they do it with genuine emotion and feeling.
- From the get-go
- (USA) If something happens from the get-go, it happens from the very beginning.
- From the horse's mouth
- If you hear something from the horse's mouth, you hear it directly from the person concerned or responsible.
- From the sublime to the ridiculous
- If something declines considerably in quality or importance, it is said to have gone from the sublime to the ridiculous.
- From the word go
- From the word go means from the very beginning of something.
- Full as a tick
- If you are as full as a tick, you have eaten too much.
- Full bore
- If something is full bore, it involves the maximum effort or is complete and thorough.
- Full circle
- When something has come full circle, it has ended up where it started.
- Full Monty
- (UK) If something is the Full Monty, it is the real thing, not reduced in any way.
- Full of beans
- If someone's full of beans, they are very energetic.
- Full of hot air
- Someone who is full of hot air talks a lot of rubbish.
- Full of oneself
- Someone who acts in a arrogant or egotistical manner is full of himself/herself.
- Full of piss and vinegar
- Someone who's full of piss and vinegar is full of youthful energy.
- Full of the joys of spring
- If you are full of the joys of spring, you are very happy and full of energy.
- Full swing
- If a something is in full swing, it is going or doing well.
- Full throttle
- If you do something full throttle, you do it with as much speed and energy as you can.
- Fullness of time
- If something happens in the fullness of time, it will happen when the time is right and appropriate.
- Fur coat and no knickers
- Someone with airs and graces, but no real class is fur coat and no knickers.
- Fuzzy thinking
- Thinking or ideas that do not agree with the facts or information available
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