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Publicaciones del Canal
She's standoffish at first — doesn't smile, doesn't explain herself. But get her into a good conversation and the banter starts almost immediately. She's feisty: she pushes back, she argues, she laughs. People say she's high maintenance, but that's usually said by someone who ran out of game.
📍standoffish — cold and distant; avoids closeness or casual interaction
📍banter — quick, witty exchange of friendly teasing
📍feisty /ˈfaɪsti/ — full of spirit; quick to argue or fight back
📍high maintenance — needing a lot of attention and emotional energy from others
📍game — skill and confidence in social situations, especially flirting
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol
| 2 | You wanted to win the argument. So you brought up something personal. And suddenly — you lost everything. 🎯
That's the idiom. To shoot yourself in the foot means to harm your own interests through a careless action or word. The damage is self-inflicted. The intent was the opposite.
📍to shoot yourself in the foot — to accidentally cause problems for yourself; to undermine your own position
It works in politics, business, relationships — anywhere a single bad move can undo your progress.
The candidate shot himself in the foot by attacking his opponent's family instead of her policies.
The idiom is informal but widely used in journalism and political commentary.
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 68 |
| 3 | SpaceX just overtook Amazon — and this headline contains one of the most useful verbs in business English.
When a company surpasses a rival in market value, journalists write: it overtook its competitor. Not passed, not beat — overtook. The verb implies gradual momentum that finally crosses a threshold.
SpaceX's shares surged over 50% after its Nasdaq debut. Analysts noted investors were betting on Musk's vision, not the numbers — SpaceX lost $4.3bn in Q1 2026, while Amazon made $30.3bn.
📍to overtake — to move ahead of a rival in a ranking or competition
📍to bet on — to invest trust or money in an uncertain outcome (often used critically in finance)
📍to mint — to generate wealth rapidly: the IPO minted Musk as the world's first trillionaire
Would you bet on a company's vision — or wait for the numbers?
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 68 |
| 4 | You didn't mean to cause offence — but you did. And now the meeting is awkward.
That's exactly what it means to step on someone's toes: to upset or offend someone, usually without intending to. It's the idiom for those painful, accidental social blunders.
📍to step on someone's toes — to offend or upset someone, typically by accident; to interfere with their role or feelings
The "unintentional" nuance is built in. If you do it on purpose, native speakers usually say something stronger.
He stepped on his colleague's toes by presenting her idea without giving her credit.
Would you use this idiom in a professional context, or does it feel too informal? 🤔
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 72 |
| 5 | English has hundreds of intensifiers for wet. Dripping wet. Drenched. Soaked to the bone. But sopping wet is different — it sounds like what it means. 💧
Sopping is not a word you'll use alone. It exists only to intensify wet. The word comes from the idea of bread soaked in liquid — completely saturated, no dryness left.
📍sopping wet — completely and heavily soaked; stronger than very wet or even drenched
She came in from the rain sopping wet, leaving puddles across the floor.
You won't see sopping before any other adjective — only wet. That makes it a fixed collocation, not a flexible intensifier.
Which sounds more natural to you — sopping wet or drenched? 🌧️
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 72 |
| 6 | In British English, saying someone is pissed is not an insult — it just means they've had too much to drink. 🍺
But in American English, pissed means angry. And pissed off means very angry in both varieties.
A phrase that's perfectly safe on one side of the Atlantic can raise eyebrows on the other.
📍pissed off — very angry, irritated (informal, both BrE and AmE)
📍pissed — drunk (BrE) / angry (AmE)
BrE: I was absolutely pissed after three pints.
AmE: I was absolutely pissed after waiting an hour.
Both sentences are grammatically identical. The meaning is completely different. 😅
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 66 |
| 7 | In a dog-eat-dog market, Alex started small — shady deliveries, street hustle, petty favours for cash. Then he threw caution to the wind and tried something bigger. It did not end well. ⚖️
📍dog-eat-dog — ruthlessly competitive; describing a situation where people act selfishly, without solidarity or mercy
📍shady — suspicious, not fully honest or legal; implying something is being deliberately concealed (informal)
📍hustle — informal or marginal moneymaking; quick schemes or work on the edge of legality (informal, originally AmE)
📍throw caution to the wind — to stop being careful and take a serious, often reckless risk
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 94 |
| 8 | Everyone loved Sarah in the design lab — she was in her element, pitching bold ideas and solving problems on the fly. But when the CEO asked her to present quarterly financials, she was out of her depth. She stumbled through the numbers, and when things went wrong, her manager threw her under the bus, blaming it all on poor preparation. After that, Sarah had a chip on her shoulder for weeks, certain no one would support her.
📍to throw someone under the bus — to blame or betray someone to save yourself
📍to have a chip on one's shoulder — to carry resentment or defensiveness, often from a past experience
📍in one's element — doing what you're naturally good at; feeling confident and at ease
📍out of one's depth — in a situation beyond your skills or knowledge; struggling to cope
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 120 |
| 9 | She had been going through the motions for months. One small remark and she bit her colleague's head off. By Friday, she was at the end of her tether. 😮💨
📍go through the motions — to do something mechanically, without genuine effort or feeling; to perform a task while being mentally or emotionally absent
📍bite someone's head off — to snap at someone aggressively, often without much cause; usually triggered by accumulated frustration
📍at the end of one's tether — completely exhausted, having run out of patience or the ability to cope
All three describe what prolonged stress looks like — in behaviour and in speech. Together, they trace a pattern most people recognise. 🔎
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 122 |
| 10 | Last night I tried to get off to sleep before midnight. By eleven I was nodding off on the sofa — out like a light within minutes. No tossing and turning, just sound sleep. A lie-in this morning did the trick. 😴
📍get off to sleep — to succeed in falling asleep (often after some difficulty)
📍nod off — to fall asleep unintentionally, often briefly
📍be out like a light — to fall asleep instantly and deeply
📍toss and turn — to move restlessly in bed, unable to sleep
📍sleep soundly — to sleep deeply, without interruption
📍have a lie-in — BrE: to stay in bed later than usual; AmE: sleep in
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 99 |
| 11 | Tech Slang of the Month
Jake spent Monday night vibe coding a new dashboard — never touched the syntax, just fed prompts to Cursor. By Wednesday, the feature was in production: pure prompt-and-pray, no QA, no code review. Thursday morning, everything crashed. Guess who's fixing it? Me. I'm officially a full-time slop wrangler now — less building, more debugging AI garbage.
📍vibe coding — writing code by feeding high-level prompts to AI tools without manually writing or understanding the syntax
📍prompt-and-pray — pushing AI-generated code straight into production and simply hoping it works
📍slop wrangler — a developer whose main job has shifted to cleaning up low-quality AI-generated code
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 100 |
| 12 | She was a late bloomer — barely noticed in school, quietly magnetic by thirty. She always marched to the beat of her own drum, and somehow people gravitated towards her because of it. Her closest friends were ride or die — they'd been there through every slow, quiet chapter.
📍late bloomer — someone who develops confidence, skill, or success later than most people expect
📍march to the beat of one's own drum — to live and act by your own values, ignoring social pressure or convention
📍gravitate towards — to be naturally and consistently drawn to someone or something
📍ride or die — fiercely loyal; someone who stays committed to you no matter the circumstances
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 91 |
| 13 | wear off is what happens when something exciting stops being exciting. 🔄
Collectors know this feeling well: the anticipation of finding a rare piece is more powerful than the moment of having it. Once the object is yours, the pleasure wears off — quickly. And the search begins again.
📍to wear off — to gradually lose effect, intensity, or appeal; said of emotions, sensations, novelty, and the effects of substances
The excitement of starting a new job usually wears off after a few months.
Pattern: [effect / feeling / sensation] wears off — always intransitive; no direct object. Collocates naturally with: excitement, novelty, enthusiasm, pain, high, the effect of.
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 133 |
| 14 | 📚 She's been scouring second-hand bookshops for weeks — brushing off dust from forgotten shelves, pulling out whatever catches her eye. Her flat shows clear signs of hoarding: books stacked spine-to-spine across every surface. She doesn't see it as a problem. Old pages are what I anchor myself to, she says. They don't move.
📍to scour — to search a place thoroughly, leaving nothing unexamined
📍to brush off — literally: remove with a light gesture; idiomatically: dismiss someone's concern without engaging with it
🔸 She's been brushing off her doctor's advice for months — and now she's paying for it.
🔸 His concerns were brushed off at the meeting
📍hoarding — compulsive accumulation of objects beyond any practical need
📍spine-to-spine — so tightly packed that the spines press together; implies density, no breathing room
📍to anchor yourself to something — to use something as a fixed point of stability when everything else feels uncertain
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 114 |
| 15 | Their banter was sharp and easy — until he began to belittle her opinions in front of others. She didn't beat around the bush: "Candidly, that was unkind, and the whole room could see it." He had nothing to say.
📍banter — light, witty, playful teasing between people who enjoy each other's company
📍belittle — to make someone feel small or unimportant, often publicly
📍beat around the bush — to avoid getting to the point; to talk around something instead of saying it directly
📍candidly — honestly and openly, without softening the truth
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 116 |
| 16 | "Don't jinx it," she warned — but he'd already told everyone. When it fell through, she made one savage comment and walked out. He spent weeks trying to expunge the whole episode from memory. But how you perceive failure shapes you more than pretending it never happened.
📍jinx — to invite bad luck by speaking too soon; also: a person or thing believed to cause misfortune
📍fall through — (of a plan or deal) to fail to happen; to collapse before it's completed
📍savage — brutally blunt or cutting (informal); can also mean impressively intense (slang, positive)
📍expunge — to remove something completely — a record, a memory, a mistake
📍perceive — to become aware of or interpret something through your senses or judgment
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 122 |
| 17 | 📍 Wrap one's head around something
》 To find a way to understand, accept, or make sense of something that is complicated, unusual, or shocking
🔸 The tornado destroyed his farm in no time, and he's still trying to wrap his head around what happened.
🔸 It took me a few days to wrap my head around the news of their sudden breakup
📍 Have a thing for/about someone/something
》To have strong, usually unreasonable feelings about someone or something.
🔸 He has a thing for stamps, he's a keen collector.
🔸 I have a thing about cats, I don't like them at all.
@enfol | 146 |
| 18 | The other guys are tall, jacked, and ripped.
But he's got game — and he knows it.
He didn't come here to shake things up.
He came here to win.
📍jacked — very muscular (slang)
📍ripped — having well-defined muscles
📍game — skill at attracting or persuading someone
📍shake things up — to change a situation dramatically
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 130 |
| 19 | The new CEO set her face against unnecessary spending from day one. She kept a tight rein on every department — no exceptions, no favourites. Her team grumbled; some told her to back off. Get off my case, she shot back. Then the quarterly results came in. From hero to zero? Absolutely not.
📍set one's face against sth — be firmly and publicly opposed to something
📍keep a tight rein on sb/sth — control someone or something firmly and carefully
📍Get off my case! — stop criticising me or telling me what to do; informal, blunt
📍from hero to zero — a rapid fall from success or popularity to failure (⚠️ opposite: from zero to hero)
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 131 |
| 20 | To a T describes a perfect match — something fits, suits, or describes with total precision.
🎯 Most common patterns: suit sb to a T, describe sth to a T, know sb to a T.
EXAMPLE:
The role suited her to a T — she read every room, handled every challenge, and collected accolades along the way.
📍to a T — exactly, perfectly, with every detail right (fits you to a T, suits her to a T)
📍accolades /ˈæk.ə.leɪdz/ — awards, honours, or public recognition of achievement (formal/journalistic register)
@ohliad @svitohliad @enfol | 116 |
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