6 interesting English idioms and the stories behind them. (Set three)

9,144 views ・ 2021-09-10

Simple English Videos


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What does it mean if you look a gift horse in the mouth?
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Or you follow a rule of thumb.
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And what happens if you follow a red herring?
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We’ll show you what all these idioms mean and more.
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And we’ll show you how to use them.
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You’ll love it because they all have stories behind them.
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Our first idiom is ‘from the horse's mouth.’
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If we get information straight from the horse’s mouth’ then we get it from someone who has
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direct knowledge.
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I got a hot tip.
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Oh yeah.
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What’s that?
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Buy shares in ACME Corp.
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Ooo, why?
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Their shares are going up today.
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I got it from the horse’s mouth.
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Ooo, who did you speak to?
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I met a guy on the bus who met a guy in a bar who works in the mail room at ACME Corp.
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That doesn’t sound like the horse’s mouth to me.
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Hmm.
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So when you can, you want to get information straight from the horse’s mouth.
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The idea is if it comes from someone who’s directly involved, it’s more likely to be
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accurate.
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The story of this idiom comes from horse trading.
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If you’re buying a horse, it can be hard to know how old it is, and how healthy it
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is.
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You can’t trust the person selling you the horse, but if you look in the horse’s mouth,
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you can see by looking at its teeth.
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You can get the truth from the horse’s mouth.
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And next we have another idiom with the same origin.
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Don’t look a gift horse in the mouth.
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This means that if someone gives you a present, you should be grateful for it and you shouldn’t
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look for things that are wrong with it.
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Coffee?
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Oh, thank you.
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Jay, this coffee mug’s got ‘engine oil’ written on it.
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Oh yeah.
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It’s new.
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They gave it to me at the gas station.
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So I’m drinking from a mug that says engine oil!
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Stop complaining.
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It was free!
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He’s never one to look a gift horse in the mouth.
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The meaning here is it’s bad manners to criticize something you got for free.
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If you say so.
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OK, next idiom.
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Bottoms up!
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This means cheers.
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It’s something we can say to friends before we drink.
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Cheers!
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Bottoms up!
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It’s an encouragement to drink, because if you put the bottom of the glass up, you
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have to finish it all.
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You don’t really have to drink it all.
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It’s just something we say.
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The idiom has an interesting history.
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Back in the 18th and 19th centuries, the English navy badly needed sailors and the king offered
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a shilling to men who would sign up.
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But they still couldn’t get enough sailors so sometimes they employed press gangs to
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recruit people.
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These gangs actually kidnapped people and forced them onto ships.
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It was terrifying.
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There were also recruiters who would go to pubs, buy men lots of drinks and trick them
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by putting a shilling in their tankard.
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The shilling was proof that they’d accepted the King’s offer and agreed to join the
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navy.
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The story goes that pubs started using tankards with glass bottoms.
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They’d say ‘bottoms up’ to tell their customers to look for a shilling before they
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began drinking.
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Is that story true?
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Good question!
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It’s true that there were press gangs who forced men to join the navy, but I don’t
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know about hiding a shilling in your tankard.
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It’s a good story anyway.
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Yeah, next one!
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Rule of thumb.
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This is a way of measuring something.
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It’s not exact but it’s based on experience.
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How long will it take you to edit the video?
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Well, it’s hard to say because it varies.
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Well.
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J ust give me a rough estimate.
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As a rule of thumb, it takes about twenty minutes to edit one minute of video.
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OK, I’ll work with that.
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Or maybe thirty minutes.
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So a rule of thumb isn’t an exact calculation.
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But it’s a useful calculation because it’s based on practical experience.
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So where does the idiom come from?
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One theory is it dates back to an English judge in the 17th century.
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He ruled that husbands can beat their wives with a stick if the stick is no wider than
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his thumb.
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We’d glad to say that’s not true.
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It’s an urban legend.
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There’s no evidence for it.
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The idiom probably comes from making flour with mill stones.
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To turn grain into flour you set the two stones and run a little grain through.
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Then you test the flour by rubbing it between your thumb and forefinger and then you adjust
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the stones to make the flour as fine as you want.
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I think that sounds much more plausible.
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Yeah, me too.
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Plausible means reasonable and likely to be true.
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OK next one.
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Red herring.
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A herring is a kind of fish, a smelly fish.
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But a red herring has a different meaning.
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It’s a fact that’s not important and that takes our attention away from the important
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facts.
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Good detective stories have a lot of red herrings, clues that distract us and point us in the
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wrong direction.
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Hmm.
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So how did he die Watson?
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Well it’s obvious, Shelock.
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Somebody stabbed him.
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I’m not so sure.
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Really?
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But look.
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There’s a knife in his back.
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That could be a red herring, designed to confuse us lead us down a wrong path.
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Then how did he die?
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It’s elementary my dear Watson.
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It was suicide.
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Oh wow Sherlock!
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You’re brilliant!
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So where does the idiom ‘red herring’ come from?
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It comes from hunting.
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Hunters had to train their dogs to follow the scent, the smell of the animal that they
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wanted to catch.
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In the past, they’d put smelly pieces of fish in trees to distract the dogs, and that
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way they could train them to ignore the scents that weren’t important.
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OK, the last idiom.
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This is a quick one.
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It’s one we think you’ll know: best man When there’s a wedding there’s a bride,
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a groom, and a best man.
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He’s a close friend or relative of the groom.
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So where does the term best man come from?
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Well. one story is that many centuries ago sometimes there was a shortage of women.
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Rival families or tribes would try to steal the bride – to kidnap her and take her away.
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The groom would ask ‘the best man’ in his village or town to help him.
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He might be the best swordsman and he’d have to be ready to fight to protect the bride.
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These days the best man just has to hold the ring and make a speech.
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Yes, it’s a much easier job now.
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We hope you’ve enjoyed learning these idioms and the stories behind them.
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Please give us a thumbs up if you liked them.
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Now this is the third video we’ve made in this series, so if you liked it, you can see
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more.
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And why not share this video with a friend.
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They might like it too.
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Bye-bye everyone.
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Bye now.
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