Master English Idioms
Learn the origins, meanings, and usage of popular English idioms with Hindi translations to elevate your vocabulary effortlessly.
"Beat Around the Bush"
Featured Idioms
In-depth explanation with origin in English & Hindi
A Piece of Cake
Use in Sentences
- The math test was a piece of cake — I finished it in fifteen minutes and had time to check my answers twice.
- Don't worry about the interview, it'll be a piece of cake for someone with your experience.
- Learning to ride a bicycle seemed impossible at first, but after a week of practice, it became a piece of cake.
The idiom "a piece of cake" originated in the American South during the 1870s, from the tradition of "cakewalk" contests held on slave plantations. In these events, enslaved African Americans would perform an elegant dance in pairs, and the most graceful couple would win a cake as a prize.
Because winning the cake was seen as an effortless achievement, the phrase evolved to mean any task that was easy or pleasant to accomplish.
The expression was later popularized by American poet Ogden Nash in his 1936 work Primrose Path: "Her picture's in the papers now, and life's a piece of cake."
यह मुहावरा 1870 के दशक में अमेरिकी दक्षिण में उत्पन्न हुआ था, जहाँ दास-बागानों पर "केकवॉक" नामक नृत्य प्रतियोगिताएँ आयोजित की जाती थीं। इन प्रतियोगिताओं में अफ़्रीकी-अमेरिकी दास जोड़ों में सुंदर नृत्य करते थे और जो जोड़ा सबसे अधिक सुंदर नृत्य करता, उसे पुरस्कार स्वरूप एक केक मिलता था।
चूँकि केक जीतना सहज और आनंददायक लगता था, इसलिए यह वाक्यांश आगे चलकर किसी भी सरल कार्य के लिए प्रयुक्त होने लगा।
बाद में 1936 में अमेरिकी कवि ऑग्डन नैश ने अपनी रचना "प्रिमरोज़ पाथ" में इस मुहावरे को लोकप्रिय बनाया।
Break the Ice
Use in Sentences
- To break the ice at the networking event, the host organized a fun team-building game.
- Rohan cracked a joke about the weather to break the ice on his first day at the office.
- Nothing can break the ice faster than asking someone about their hobbies with genuine interest.
The expression "break the ice" has a literal nautical origin dating back to the 16th century. Before modern engines, cities in Northern Europe and Russia relied on trade ships that had to navigate frozen rivers and harbors during winter.
Small, specially-built vessels called "icebreakers" were sent ahead to literally smash through the ice, creating a path for the larger trading ships to follow.
The metaphorical use first appeared in Sir Thomas North's translation of Plutarch's Lives (1579). By Shakespeare's time, the phrase appeared in The Taming of the Shrew (1590).
"ब्रेक द आइस" की उत्पत्ति 16वीं शताब्दी के उत्तरी यूरोप की नौवहन परंपरा से जुड़ी है। आधुनिक इंजनों से पहले, उत्तरी यूरोप एवं रूस के शहर सर्दियों में जमी हुई नदियों से जूझते थे।
"आइसब्रेकर" नामक विशेष जहाज़ आगे भेजे जाते थे, जो बर्फ़ तोड़कर बड़े व्यापारिक जहाज़ों के लिए मार्ग प्रशस्त करते थे।
इसका लाक्षणिक प्रयोग पहली बार सर थॉमस नॉर्थ द्वारा 1579 के प्लूटार्क अनुवाद में मिलता है।
Bite the Bullet
Use in Sentences
- After months of postponing, Priya finally decided to bite the bullet and get her wisdom tooth removed before the exams.
- The startup founder had to bite the bullet and lay off twenty employees to keep the company afloat.
- I know studying for six hours seems exhausting, but sometimes you have to bite the bullet if you want to crack SSC CGL.
This idiom has a gruesome but fascinating military origin. Before the widespread use of anaesthesia in the mid-to-late 1800s, wounded soldiers had to undergo emergency surgeries — amputations, bullet extractions, and wound cauterization — while fully conscious.
To help the injured soldier endure the pain, army surgeons would place a lead bullet between the patient's teeth. The soldier was instructed to literally "bite the bullet" and bear the pain in silence.
The earliest written record appears in Rudyard Kipling's 1891 novel "The Light That Failed": "Bite on the bullet, old man, and don't let them think you're afraid."
इस मुहावरे की उत्पत्ति एक रोमांचक किन्तु भयावह सैन्य इतिहास से हुई है। 19वीं सदी के मध्य तक संवेदनाहरण का व्यापक उपयोग नहीं था।
असहनीय पीड़ा से जूझते सैनिक को अपनी जीभ न काट लेने हेतु सैन्य चिकित्सक उसके दाँतों के बीच एक सीसे की गोली रख देते थे।
इसका लाक्षणिक प्रमाण रुडयार्ड किपलिंग के 1891 के उपन्यास "द लाइट दैट फ़ेल्ड" में मिलता है।
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A Piece of Cake
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