Collocations: Fast Foodthe Quick Train A Quick Meala Fast Shower
Collocations: Fast Foodthe Quick Train A Quick Meala Fast Shower
Collocations: Fast Foodthe Quick Train A Quick Meala Fast Shower
COLLOCATIONS
What is a collocation?
A collocation is two or more words that often go together. These combinations just sound "right"
to native English speakers, who use them all the time. On the other hand, other combinations
may be unnatural and just sound "wrong". Look at these examples:
FIXED EXPRESSIONS
To children, non-native English speakers, and anyone who confronts a fixed expression for the
first time, they can be baffling. A fixed expression is a little like a secret code that allows access
to a club that not everyone can enter. Its a phrase that has a very specific meaning that cant be
expressed any other way and also cant be deduced just by considering the sum of its parts. Some
fixed expressions, like ready, aim, fire are used so often that the opportunity to turn them into a
joke creates another fixed expression. Others, such as before you know it or to tell you the
truth have been around for so long that they function almost as a single word.
Unlike idioms, fixed expressions typically offer neither folk wisdom nor an image. Two heads
are better than one creates a bizarre, yet effective, visual idea of one body that operates with two
heads, while the idioms meaning is that two people working on a problem have a better chance
of solving it than just a single thinker. Fixed expressions are more often a collection of words
with individual meaning that really have nothing to do with one another.
All of a sudden is a perfect example. All means a totality, a location or moment in time in
which everything is included. Of a is really just a grammatical phrase with no internal meaning
of its own. Sudden refers to something completely unexpected; it is only the final word in this
expression that contributes meaning to the fixed expression, which is simply another way of
saying suddenly.
For example:
IDIOMS
An idiom is a phrase where the words together have a meaning that is different from the
dictionary definitions of the individual words, which can make idioms hard for ESL students and
learners to understand. Here, we provide a dictionary of 3,782 English idiomatic expressions
with definitions.
For example:
Fight like Kilkenny cats
Jump off the page
Like collecting frogs in a bucket
Leading edge
when the pigs fly!
Not for nothing
Bleed dry
Let the dust settle
Take root
It takes all kinds to make a world
Bring home
Brush with death