20 useful food idioms to spice up your writing
- We offer you a smorgasbord of food-related phrases for use in everyday speech
- It'll be a total piece of cake
A piece of cake
Meaning: something that is easy to do
Use it: “Scoring all A’s was a piece of cake. I didn’t even study properly!” boasted Philip.
Bring home the bacon
Meaning: to earn money to live on
Use it: Mary was tired of being the only one in the family bringing home the bacon.
Cheap as chips
Meaning: really inexpensive
Use it: “This chair is on sale; it’s practically cheap as chips!”
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Not your cup of tea
Meaning: it is not the type of thing that you like
Use it: “Drag racing really is not my cup of tea,” said Hank.
Take something with a pinch of salt
Meaning: to not completely believe something that you are told, because you think it is unlikely to be true
Use it: “Neil lies all the time, so people often take what he says with a pinch of salt.”
Have your cake and eat it too
Meaning: to have all the benefits of a situation when, in fact, having one thing means that you cannot have the other
Use it: Simon wants to go to university, but does not want to study. His parents say he cannot have his cake and eat it too.
As cool as a cucumber
Meaning: very calm and relaxed, especially in a difficult situation
Use it: He was as cool as a cucumber, considering he was talking about his company going bankrupt.
Egg on someone
Meaning: to encourage someone to do something, especially something unwise or bad
Use it: Egged on by his friends, he was determined to fight his rival.
In a nutshell
Meaning: using as few words as possible
Use it: The situation in Syria is too complex to be explained in a nutshell.
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Put all your eggs in one basket
Meaning: to depend on a single person or plan of action for
your success
Use it: You are investing all your money in stocks? Don’t put all your eggs in one basket, the financial adviser warned.
Bear fruit
Meaning: to be successful especially after a lot of work or effort
Use it: Joan’s hard work is bearing fruit; her boss has promised her a promotion soon.
Buy a lemon
Meaning: something you buy that gives you a lot of problems
Use it: “I think you bought a lemon!” said John’s friend when he came home with an old, dodgy-looking Nintendo Switch.
Couch potato
Meaning: a person who watches a lot of television and does not have an active life
Use it: My friend becomes a couch potato during the football season.
Eat humble pie
Meaning: to admit that you were wrong
Use it: The politician was forced to eat humble pie after losing his seat in the general election.
Be like taking candy from a baby
Meaning: to be very easy
Use it: The game of tennis seems so easy for him, it’s like he’s taking candy from a baby.
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Pie in the sky
Meaning: something good that is unlikely to happen
Use it: I wanted to be a football superstar, but I knew it was probably pie in the sky.
Sell like hot cakes
Meaning: to be bought quickly and in large numbers
Use it: The new product is apparently selling like hot cakes.
Walk on eggshells
Meaning: to be very careful with your words or actions
Use it: After my brother broke up with his girlfriend, I was walking on eggshells, avoiding talking about it with their friends.
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Have egg on your face
Meaning: to be very embarrassed because of something you said or did
Use it: Henry ended up with egg on his face when none of his predictions about the World Cup came true.
That’s the way the cookie crumbles
Meaning: said when something slightly unlucky has happened that could not have been prevented and so must be accepted
Use it: “That’s the way the cookie crumbles,’’ the tennis star said. “I didn’t play that well in my second round match, so I knew I was probably in for a tough match today.”