What is an Idiom? || Definition & Examples (2024)

What is an Idiom? Transcript (English & Spanish Subtitles Available in Video, Click HERE for Spanish Transcript)

By Sindya Bhanoo, Oregon State Assistant Professor of Creative Writing and Prize-Winning Novelist

21 March 2023

Idioms are phrases which cannot be understood simply by looking at the meaning of the individual words in the phrase.We use idiomatic expressions all the time. If your friend is “beating around the bush,” they are avoiding speaking with you about something directly. “That’s the way the ball bounces” suggests that some things are just out of our control. When someone says “It’s raining cats and dogs,” they mean it’s raining heavily. Cats and dogs are not actually falling from the sky. That last idiom may have originated during the 17th century in England, when cats and dogs were known to live in thatched roofs. During heavy rains, they may have slipped and fallen into the streets.

The mystery novelist Agatha Christie loved to use idioms. Christie’s beloved detective, Hercule Poirot is often found to be “in a brown study,” or fully absorbed in his own thoughts. In the short story “Jewelry Robbery at the Grand Metropolitan,” Poirot and his reliable assistant Hastings encounter a woman with some missing pearls. Hastings recounts Poirot’s behavior: “He was staring thoughtfully out of the window, and seemed to have fallen into a brown study.”

idiom_poirot.jpg

What is an Idiom? || Definition & Examples (2)

In Christie’s book And Then There Were None, a judge named Justice Wargrove reflects on an old case of his, when he sentenced a man named Edward Seton to death. (He’s going to bed as he does this.)

"Carefully, Mr. Justice Wargrove removed his false teeth and dropped them into a glass of water. The shrunken lips fell in. It was a cruel mouth now, cruel and predatory. Hooding his eyes, the judge smiled to himself. He’d cooked Seton’s goose alright."

idiom_example_and_then_there_were_none.jpg

What is an Idiom? || Definition & Examples (3)

“Cooked the goose” is an idiom that means “to ruin.” Thanks to Justice Wargrove, Seton was in big trouble.

Did you catch the other bits of interesting language in that section? The phrase “Hooding his eyes” is metaphorical. So is “shrunken lips.” To learn more about metaphors, you can watch my colleague Tim Jensen’s video. If you really want to get into it, some idioms are also metaphors.

The word idiom comes from the Greek word idios, which means for “one’s own” or “private.” That’s apt because idioms are kind of like private jokes between the people who know them. Since idioms are also culturally specific, they aren’t solely connected to language. In the UK, when someone says they are “chuffed to bits,” they mean that they are very pleased. If you speak American English, you may not be familiar with that idiom.

The linguist Anatoly Liberman, who has studied and written about the origin of idioms extensively, found that some idioms are highly localized, never used outside of a small community. Idioms come and go, and many have died out. He says that although idioms are phrases we learn them the way we learn words. It is the entire phrase that has a meaning.Often, the order of the words in the phrase cannot be changed around. You could say that idioms are a kind of literary and cultural shorthand.

Can you wrap your head around that? means “Did that make sense to you?” Because idioms cannot be literally translated, their meanings cannot be predicted. Foreign language speakers have a particularly hard time wrapping their heads around idioms.

The TED program asked some of its translators for idioms that might confound English speakers. In Latvian, “To blow little ducks,” means “to talk nonsense or to lie.” In French, “The carrots are cooked!” means the situation can’t be changed. It’s similar to the English idiom “There’s no use crying over spilled milk.”

idiom_carrots_are_cooked.jpg

What is an Idiom? || Definition & Examples (4)

Without an explanation, these would be all Greek to me. Hey, that’s another idiom: “It’s all Greek to me.” That one can be found in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, though it was likely in use before that.

If you have a favorite idiom, in any language, I’d love to hear it. You can share it in the comments in the video. Well, I think that’s a wrap.

Want to cite this?

MLA Citation: Bhanoo, Sindya. "What is Alliteration?" Oregon State Guide to English Literary Terms, 21 Mar. 2023, Oregon State University, https://liberalarts.oregonstate.edu/wlf/what-idiom-definition-examples. Accessed [insert date].

Interested in more video lessons? View the full series:

The Oregon State Guide to English Literary Terms

What is an Idiom? || Definition & Examples (2024)

FAQs

What is an Idiom? || Definition & Examples? ›

An idiom is a phrase that is common in a language or culture that means something different from how it literally sounds. For example, 'The early bird gets the worm' means 'Being the first to do something usually means getting the best choice of outcomes.

What is an idiom definition and examples? ›

Idioms are phrases which cannot be understood simply by looking at the meaning of the individual words in the phrase. We use idiomatic expressions all the time. If your friend is “beating around the bush,” they are avoiding speaking with you about something directly.

What are 3 examples of an idiom? ›

Here are 20 English idioms that everyone should know:
  • Under the weather. What does it mean? ...
  • The ball is in your court. What does it mean? ...
  • Spill the beans. What does it mean? ...
  • Break a leg. What does it mean? ...
  • Pull someone's leg. What does it mean? ...
  • Sat on the fence. What does it mean? ...
  • Through thick and thin. ...
  • Once in a blue moon.

What is the easiest definition of an idiom? ›

An idiom is a common phrase which means something different from its literal meaning but can be understood because of their popular use. Idioms are difficult for someone not good at speaking the language. Some idioms are only used by some groups of people or at certain times.

What are the 4 types of idioms? ›

Generally speaking, there are four types of idioms: pure idioms, binomial idioms, partial idioms, and prepositional idioms. Some people may consider clichés, proverbs, and euphemisms to be types of idioms as well, but we'll explain why they are different from idioms.

What are 5 idiom examples? ›

The most common English idioms
IdiomMeaningUsage
Better late than neverBetter to arrive late than not to come at allby itself
Bite the bulletTo get something over with because it is inevitableas part of a sentence
Break a legGood luckby itself
Call it a dayStop working on somethingas part of a sentence
33 more rows

What is an idiom and phrase with examples? ›

An idiom is a phrase that has a figurative meaning, whereas a phrase is a group of words that have a literal meaning. For example, “kick the bucket” is an idiom that means to die. Whereas “the cat sat on the mat” is a phrase that has a literal meaning.

What is the difference between an idiom and a metaphor? ›

An idiom is an expression that cannot be understood based on the meaning of the individual words that comprise it (e.g., “once in a blue moon”). A metaphor compares two unrelated things by stating that one is (or isn't) like the other (e.g., “Laura is the light of my life.”)

What is the most popular idiom? ›

The most common English idioms
IdiomMeaning
The best of both worldsAn ideal situation
Time flies when you're having funYou don't notice how long something lasts when it's fun
To get bent out of shapeTo get upset
To make matters worseMake a problem worse
33 more rows

What does idiom literally mean? ›

An idiom is a phrase or expression that usually presents a figurative, non-literal meaning attached to the phrase. Some phrases which become figurative idioms, however, do retain the phrase's literal meaning. Categorized as formulaic language, an idiom's figurative meaning is different from the literal meaning.

Which is the best example of an idiom? ›

The word “idiom” comes from the Greek word “idioma,” meaning peculiar phrasing. For example, “under the weather” is an idiom universally understood to mean sick or ill. If you say you're feeling “under the weather,” you don't literally mean that you're standing underneath the rain.

What is difference between idiomatic phrases and idioms? ›

Yes, idioms are also referred to as idiomatic expressions. Technically, the term "idiomatic expression" could also be used to describe language that is colloquial but not necessarily an idiom, but this would be unusual. An idiom is a word or a phrase that makes a different point from what it literally says.

What is the difference between an idiom and a colloquialism? ›

Colloquialism= the terms/words which are only used in conversations/dialogue only. Idioms=idioms are expressions which have a figurative meaning and the meaning is different from its words literally.

What is the difference between an idiom and a proverb? ›

An idiom is defined as a phrase that contains its own meaning but cannot be understood in layman's language. A proverb is defined as a well-known sentence that is used to give advice to the other person.

What are 20 examples of idioms and their meanings? ›

List of 100+ Common Idioms, Their Meanings and Examples of Their Usage in Sentences
IdiomMeaning
Under the weatherFeeling ill / Getting a cold
Miss the boatTo act too slowly and miss an opportunity
Pull someone's legTo make fun of someone
No pain no gainSuffering or making efforts is required to achieve something
62 more rows

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