10 EVERYDAY IDIOMS | PHRASES RELATED TO SHOES | AMERICAN ENGLISH PHRASES | Rachel’s English

43,839 views

2019-01-29 ・ Rachel's English


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10 EVERYDAY IDIOMS | PHRASES RELATED TO SHOES | AMERICAN ENGLISH PHRASES | Rachel’s English

43,839 views ・ 2019-01-29

Rachel's English


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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David is such a goody two-shoes.
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Hey!
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Do you know this idiom?
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If not, watch this video. We're going to go over idioms related to shoes.
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What does goody-two-shoes mean?
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It means somebody who, here's another phrase, sucks up to somebody.
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Somebody who's always being extra good, above and beyond what's normal.
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And usually, it's a negative phrase.
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You think of someone being good is a good thing, but in certain contexts, they start to seem like not real,
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and like they're just doing this to try to please somebody, or to get some sort of outcome,
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then you might call that person a goody two-shoes.
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You're not really a goody two-shoes.
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No. I'm not.
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Do you know anybody who's a goody two-shoes?
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Uh, no. Well, the thing that popped into my mind was one of my roommates in college who was a pre-med major,
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and that's obviously a really serious course of study, and so he did have to be diligent.
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But sometimes it did seem like he was over studying,
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so we would poke and prod and try to get him to come out and have fun with us.
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We would sort of taunt him with: Oh, don't be a goody two-shoes! Come on, let's go have fun for a little while.
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Do you mean you were literally poking and prodding this kid at his desk?
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No. No. That may have happened too.
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Okay, you were figuratively trying to get him out of this chair by saying
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stop being a goody two-shoes, let's go get some beer.
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Yeah. Exactly.
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The phrase to put yourself ‘in another person's shoes’.
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This means it has nothing to do with their Footwear. Do not go put on this person's shoes.
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It has to do with trying to understand something from their perspective, seeing it from how they would see it.
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Um, do you have an example of what this would be?
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Yeah. So the thing that I thought of was that when I was working at a high school, at the beginning of the year,
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one of the exercises that we would do together is
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try to imagine what it would be like to be the students coming into school on the first day of school.
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What would their mindset be like? What kinds of feelings would they be having?
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And try to put ourselves in their shoes for a little bit to try to think about how would they want us to be as a staff.
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So it basically, means to see a situation from someone else's perspective.
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Exactly.
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The phrase ‘shaking in your boots’
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means to be really nervous about something, really intimidated by something.
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Again, you don't have to be wearing boots. It has nothing to do with actual Footwear.
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It's just an idiom.
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Do you have an example of this?
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Yeah. So couple years ago, I went in for a job interview and typically, when you go in for an interview,
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you imagine being with one other person and answering some questions.
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And I got there and I met one person, and it really quickly became clear that I was getting ready to go into
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a roomful of most of the staff
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and I was kind of shaking in my boots.
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I couldn't believe that I was going to go do that.
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You didn't feel prepared for that.
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Yeah. I wasn't prepared and it just, it sort of was like I was instantly nervous in a way that I hadn't been.
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Mm-hmm.
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Waiting for the other shoe to drop.
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This is when something is going well but you don't expect it to last.
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You're sort of feeling like the other shoe is going to drop, things are going to change,
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things are going to end up not going so well.
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Do you have an example of this idiom?
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Well, I'm chuckling because my example is being a lifelong Philadelphia sports fan.
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It just seems like anytime something goes well, the other shoe is going to drop.
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And so the current example is the 76ers, our basketball team,
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they've been rebuilding and they've been really bad which means that they get a high draft pick every year.
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And for three years in a row,
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I think it was three years in a row, their draft pick got hurt before the season even started.
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So every year, we would get excited because they got this a new great player,
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but you're also sort of waiting for the other shoe to drop.
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>> Especially if it happens three years in a row. >> It kept dropping.
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Yeah.
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The good news kept ending for the Philadelphia 76ers.
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Exactly.
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The idiom big shoes to fill.
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This means that you are stepping into position or taking over something from someone who was really well-liked,
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who did their job really well.
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That's when you have big shoes to fill.
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And actually in my academy every month, I do conversation exercises,
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and I took an excerpt from a show where they use this idiom.
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They were talking about a principal who'd been very loved by staff, by students, who was leaving,
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and when he talked about hiring a new principal, the man in charge of that said
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'this person has big shoes to fill'.
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The phrase ‘on a shoestring budget’ means to do something with very little money.
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A shoestring is what you might lace your shoes up with, and it's very thin, it can break.
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We actually really use shoelace more than shoestring Now, except for in this idiom,
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we still have this idiom ‘on a shoestring budget'.
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So for example, when I started Rachel's English it was very much so on a shoestring budget.
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I just used the camera on my computer, I bought a sheet to hang behind me for like ten dollars or something,
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very much so a shoestring budget.
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Another term that I could use for this is I 'bootstrapped' it.
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I didn't rely on other people paying consultants, you know, getting a lighting designer or whatever.
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I just did it all myself. I bootstrapped it.
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And you could also use the phrase you may have heard this, to pull yourself up by your bootstraps.
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That means to do something to make change, usually after something negative has happened, all on your own.
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So for example, somebody gets fired from a job, maybe and they're pretty down about it, they're not feeling great,
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but they pull themselves up by their bootstraps,
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they get out there, they applied more jobs, and they find one that's even better.
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Great phrase. If I were in your shoes.
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This is when you give advice to somebody.
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It's like saying ‘if I were you’, but it's become ‘If I were in your shoes, I would do this.’
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So people come to Philadelphia and they come stay with us and they say: so where should I get a cheese steak?
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>> And I always say… >> Wait, why do they say that?
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Because Philadelphia is known for cheese steaks?
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Right.
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That's our famous sandwich.
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>> Mm-hmm. >> Delicious.
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And there are a couple of really famous spots around the city...
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That everyone has heard of.
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When they come, they say you should I go to Pat's or should I go to Gino's?
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Exactly.
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And that's when I cut in with my unsolicited, no it's solicited...
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It's probably solicited.
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>> Cut it with my advice. >> Your advice.
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And say if I were in your shoes, I just go to Joe's.
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And Joe's is a spot right here in our neighborhood that I think has the best cheese steak in the city.
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And he's been to Gino's, you've been to Pat's, what's-- oh Jim's, you've been to Jim's.
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These are the three most famous.
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Yes.
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And you're saying Joe's is better.
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Better.
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Got to go to Joe's.
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There's another one that's not directly related to shoes but to feet.
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And I wanted to include this because last week, when I was going over different shoes with my sister-in-law Lisa,
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she said she had this one pair of
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boots that she wore that she said she loves to wear these in the winter because she always has cold feet.
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And I thought, okay.
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So she literally, her feet are cold, but we use this idiom all the time and it means to be nervous about something.
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And the... I think the most common use of this is with marriage.
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Mm-hmm.
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Would you say?
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Yeah, I think that's right.
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So you get engaged to somebody, leading up to the wedding, you might start to feel a little nervous
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little anxious, like, oh my gosh, this is a big commitment.
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Then people might use the phrase: Is he getting cold feet? Does she have cold feet?
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Mm-hmm.
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Cold feet.
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The last one I want to go over is the phrase 'if the shoe fits, wear it'.
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Which is often just shortened to 'if the shoe fits'.
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Right.
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And it's a way of acknowledging criticism on somebody.
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So let's say, for example,
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in high school, I'm learning how to write,
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I'm not a very good writer, I come home and I say to my mom:
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Man, my teacher just keeps telling me I'm not a strong writer.
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Well, my mom knows this, because she's been helping me with my writing. She might say, if the shoe fits.
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That's like saying 'I agree you're not a strong writer'.
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So it's not as harsh as saying it's true, but it's the same meaning.
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If someone gives you feedback: you complain a lot.
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That's not something you want to hear. Maybe you go to a friend and say, Sam just said I complain a lot,
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and if that friend agrees that friend might say, if the shoe fits.
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I hope you're not having cold feet about watching another video.
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I want to be sure that you see this shoe vocabulary video from last week if you haven't already.
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If you have, then check out this playlist of other videos i've done with David where we go over idioms.
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David, thanks for joining me here.
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You got it.
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That's it guys and thanks so much for using Rachel's English.
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