| 
					Idiom | 
					Definition | 
					Usage | 
				
				
					| each and every | 
					absolutely every | 
					I want each and 
					every one of you to bring your textbooks tomorrow. | 
				
				
					| EAGER 
					BEAVER | 
					
					a person who is very excited and enthusiastic about pursuing 
					some activity 
					 
					The expression suggests the image of an anxiously working 
					beaver, which is reputed to be an active, industrious 
					animal. It has a slightly negative connotation, as of 
					someone eager to impress others with his/her effort. | 
					
					1. Paul just discovered jogging as a form of exercise, and 
					he went out and bought new running shoes, a new tracksuit, 
					and all the other gear that goes along with it. He’s a real 
					eager beaver about jogging. 
					 
					2. Dieting must be done slowly and carefully. Don’t be such 
					an eager beaver to lose weight that you harm yourself by not 
					eating anything. | 
				
				
					| ears 
					are burning | 
					
					 | 
					
					  | 
				
				
					| ear to the 
					ground | 
					paid attention to 
					everything | 
					He kept his ear 
					to the ground and knew about the changes before 
					everyone else. | 
				
				
					| ease off | 
					reduce | 
					The president was asked 
					to ease off some of the new company rules. | 
				
				
					| easy come, easy 
					go | 
					unimportant | 
					For him, losing his job 
					was easy come, easy go. | 
				
				
					| easy does it | 
					Slowly | 
					Easy does it
					is the best way to learn to drive a car. | 
				
				
					| easy-going | 
					relaxed | 
					She has a very 
					easy-going management style. | 
				
				
					| easy grader | 
					lenient when grading | 
					My friends said she's an
					easy grader. | 
				
				
					| easy mark | 
					likely victims | 
					The elderly are an
					easy mark because they usually carry cash. | 
				
				
					| eat away at | 
					bother | 
					The problem really began 
					to eat away at him. | 
				
				
					| eat away at | 
					destroy | 
					The mildew began to
					eat away at the window frame. | 
				
				
					| EAT 
					CROW/HUMBLE PIE | 
					
					to humble oneself because one has been proved wrong 
					 
					Synonym: swallow (one’s) pride | 
					
					1. Roger told his daughter that he didn’t believe her. When 
					he found out he was wrong, he had to eat crow and admit his 
					mistake. 
					 
					2. Cathy laughed at herself when she realized she was wrong 
					and had spoken too quickly. “I jump to the wrong conclusions 
					so often, I’m always eating humble pie,” she said. | 
				
				
					| eat dirt | 
					accept insults | 
					He made the senior 
					manager eat dirt because of the way he was 
					mistreated. | 
				
				
					| eat humble pie | 
					admit to the mistake and 
					apologize | 
					He was forced to 
					eat humble pie. | 
				
				
					| eat like a bird | 
					very little | 
					I know that you usually
					eat like a bird. | 
				
				
					| eat like a horse | 
					a lot | 
					I know that you usually
					eat like a horse. | 
				
				
					| eat like a pig | 
					 a lot | 
					I know that you usually
					eat like a pig. | 
				
				
					| EAT 
					(ONE’S) HAT | 
					
					to do something unpleasant in the case of being proven wrong 
					 
					Compare to: bet (one’s) bottom dollar; bet (one’s) boots | 
					
					1. I don’t believe the boss is going to give us an extra day 
					off work at Christmas time. If he does, I’ll eat my hat. 
					 
					2. Matthew told me he would eat his hat if my favorite 
					football team won the championship this year. He felt there 
					was no possibility that they could win. | 
				
				
					| EAT 
					(ONE’S) HEART OUT | 
					
					to suffer silently in a hopeless situation 
					 
					Compare to: cry over spilled milk 
					 
					Whereas cry over spilled milk is to grieve over some event 
					that has happened and cannot be changed, eat one’s heart out 
					is to grieve over an emotional situation that cannot be 
					changed. The expression is also used in the command form by 
					someone who has no sympathy for the grieving person (as in 
					sentence 2). | 
					
					1. Mike thought Sue would eventually marry him. Now that she 
					has married Tony, he’s eating his heart out. 
					 
					2. Kevin tried to take the job that was rightfully mine by 
					telling my boss that I had stolen money from the company. 
					When I got the promotion anyway, all I could say to him was, 
					“Eat your heart out.” | 
				
				
					| eat one's words | 
					admit he was wrong | 
					He was forced to 
					eat his words after his boss found the mistake. | 
				
				
					| eat out | 
					eat in a restaurant | 
					She like to eat 
					out three or four times a week. | 
				
				
					| EAT OUT 
					OF (SOMEONE’S) HAND | 
					
					to be submissive; to have someone eating out of one’s hand 
					means to get someone to be submissive 
					 
					The expression originates from the idea that an animal that 
					will eat out of one’s hand is very tame. It connotes an 
					unhealthy submissiveness. | 
					
					1. Jerry will do anything Lisa wants. She has him eating out 
					of her hand. 
					 
					2. The politician was so polished that had the crowd eating 
					out of his hand by the end of his speech. | 
				
				
					| eating someone | 
					bothering | 
					I do not know what is
					eating her today. | 
				
				
					| EGG ON 
					(ONE’S) FACE, HAVE | 
					
					to be or appear to be embarrassed | 
					
					1. I can tell by the way you look that you’ve been caught 
					doing something naughty. You have egg on your face. 
					 
					2. Andy sure had egg on his face when he realized he had 
					made a fool of himself at the party. | 
				
				
					| egg someone on | 
					push him | 
					She likes to egg 
					him on to fight more when they have an argument. | 
				
				
					| eke out | 
					just barely make | 
					He was able to 
					eke out a living with the restaurant. | 
				
				
					| elbow grease | 
					effort and strength | 
					You need to use a lot of
					elbow grease to get the kitchen cleaned. | 
				
				
					| elbow room | 
					space | 
					They moved to the 
					country in order to have a little more elbow room. | 
				
				
					| 
					elephant in the room | 
					
					 | 
					
					  | 
				
				
					| 
					ELEVENTH HOUR | 
					
					late or last-minute 
					 
					Compare to: down to the wire; in the nick of time 
					 
					Down to the wire and in the nick of time convey a greater 
					sense of being just barely in time than the eleventh hour. | 
					
					1. You certainly left making your decision to take this 
					flight until the eleventh hour. You’re lucky there were 
					still seats available. 
					 
					2. Don’t wait until the eleventh hour to decide to see the 
					doctor. If you do, you may find that it’s too late. | 
				
				
					| end in itself | 
					the main purpose or goal | 
					For some people 
					traveling is an end in itself and the 
					destination is not important. | 
				
				
					| end of one's 
					rope | 
					last of his ideas | 
					He is at the end 
					of his rope regarding what to do about his job. | 
				
				
					| end up | 
					finally be | 
					I knew that she would
					end up at the dessert counter. | 
				
				
					| ETERNAL 
					TRIANGLE | 
					
					a situation in which two men love the same woman or two 
					women love the same man 
					 
					The theme of the eternal triangle recurs throughout the 
					literature of many cultures. The triangle (three people) is 
					described as eternal because it is such a common situation. | 
					
					1. Both Nancy and Tanya love Victor. It’s the age-old story 
					of the eternal triangle. 
					 
					2. Like many other romantic comedies, this film is about two 
					men who fall in love with the same woman. It’s a story of an 
					eternal triangle gone awry. | 
				
				
					| even so | 
					nevertheless | 
					He always works hard but
					even so he has no money saved. | 
				
				
					| every dog has 
					his day | 
					everyone will have a 
					chance or turn | 
					You should know that
					every dog has his day. | 
				
				
					| every other | 
					on each alternate | 
					She has to work 
					every other Saturday evening. | 
				
				
					| every so often | 
					occasionally | 
					You should send email
					every so often. | 
				
				
					| EVERY 
					TOM, DICK, AND HARRY | 
					
					everyone | 
					
					1. I know the car salesman made you think he was only 
					offering a great deal to you, but in fact he has offered the 
					same deal to every Tom, Dick and Harry that has walked into 
					his showroom. 
					 
					2. My rug is ruined. Every Tom, Dick, and Harry must have 
					come through here with muddy shoes. | 
				
				
					| every Tom, Dick 
					and Harry | 
					the average person | 
					He is not the same as
					every Tom, Dick and Harry.  | 
				
				
					| eyes are bigger 
					than one's stomach | 
					desire for the food is 
					greater than what she can actually eat | 
					Every time she orders 
					food, her eyes are bigger than her stomach. | 
				
				
					| eyes in the back 
					of one's head | 
					the ability to know what 
					is happening behind her 
					 | 
					She has eyes in 
					the back of her head. | 
				
				
					| eyes pop out | 
					surprise | 
					Watch her eyes 
					pop out when she sees all this money. |