Reading Comprehension Idioms Flashcards

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1
Q

Accorded to

A

Given or granted to. (Sometimes accorded is used without to, as in I was surprised by the
adulation accorded the elderly author at the high school assembly.)

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2
Q

Albatross or albatross around the neck of (a person or group)

A

A constant burden or worry; an
obstacle. Literally, an albatross is a bird. The expression an albatross around one’s neck creates the silly image of a person wearing a (dead?) bird—but that certainly sounds like a constant burden or worry!

(This expression comes from The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, in which an old man had to wear an albatross around his neck as punishment for his sins.)

The city has done an admirable job rebuilding its infrastructure and marketing itself, but the
crime rate continues to be an albatross around the city’s neck in trying to attract tourists.

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3
Q

At loggerheads

A

In conflict, at a standstill.

The strike is not likely to end soon—the transit authority and the union representatives have
been at loggerheads for weeks.

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4
Q

(Verb) by so (verb)ing

A

The second verb is equivalent to or causes the first verb. He defaults by so refusing means when he refuses, he is defaulting (that is, neglecting to fulfill the duties of a contract). By so agreeing also occurs on its own, meaning by agreeing to do the thing that was just mentioned.

He agreed to run as the Green Party candidate though he already holds a Democratic party
chairmanship, which he effectively abandoned by so agreeing.

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5
Q

By the same token

A

This expression means that the speaker will then say something else based on the same evidence he or she just used to make a different point.

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6
Q

Colored by

A

Influenced or prejudiced by.

Her opinion about the prison system was colored by having grown up effectively an orphan
while both her parents served sentences in separate prisons.

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7
Q

Cut bait

A

Give up, abandon an activity. Often part of the expression fish or cut bait, to cut bait is to
stop fishing.

As much as he wanted to be an entrepreneur, after a year of struggling, he cut bait and asked
his former boss for his old job back.

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8
Q

Entree into

A

Admittance, permission to enter. Most people in the U.S. think of an entree as the main
dish o f a meal, but it originally was an appetizer—a dish that leads into the main course (the word is related to “enter”). A person who wants to rise in society might seek an entree into a certain social group. (You can also say “seek entree”—sometimes in that expression, the word an is omitted.)

For disadvantaged young people, good public schools can provide an entree into the middle
class.

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9
Q

Garden-variety

A

Ordinary, common.

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10
Q

Gloss over, paper over, whitewash

A

These are all expressions for covering up a problem, insult, etc., rather than addressing it or fixing it. Think of a dirty floor that you just put a pretty rug on top of instead of cleaning. Because gloss is slippery (think of lip gloss), gloss over often has the sense of trying to smoothly and quickly move on to something else.

He made a snide remark about short people and then tried to gloss over it when he realized
his 5 2 ” boss had overheard.

The journalist accused the government of trying to whitewash the scandal, implying that the
officials covered up the incident out of concern for national security rather than to protect
themselves.

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11
Q

Hand-wringing

A

An excessive expression of concern, guilt, or distress.

There has been much hand-wringing (or wringing of hands) over falling test scores, with so-called
“experts” acting as if the world will end if students do 1% worse in math and science.

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12
Q

Hold the line vs. toe the line

A

Hold the line means keep something the same. It is a reference to (American) football, in which you don’t want the opponent to get the ball past the line of scrimmage in the middle of the field. To toe the line is to conform to a policy or way of thinking, or follow the rules. One theory about the origin of the expression is that, on ships, barefoot sailors were made to line up for inspection—that is, to put their toes on an actual line on the deck of the ship.

My boss doesn’t want to hear original ideas at all—he just wants me to toe the line.

If colleges cannot hold the line on rising tuition costs, students will have to take on even more
crippling loan burdens.

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13
Q

Just cause

A

Just as an adjective means justified, legal, fair. Just cause means a legally sufficient reason.
In some legal codes, an employer must show just cause for firing an employee.

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14
Q

Opening salvo

A

A salvo is a simultaneous firing of guns or release of bombs. Metaphorically, an opening
salvo is something that starts a fight.

The introduction of Bill H.R. 2, given the inflammatory name “Repealing the Job-Killing
Health Care Law Act,” was seen by some as an opening salvo by the Republicans.

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15
Q

Per se

A

In itself, by itself, intrinsically. From Latin, often written in italics. Per se is often used to indicate
that while something isn’t naturally or the same as something else, it still has the same effect.

The policy isn’t sexist,per se, but it has had a disproportionate impact on women that deserves
further study.

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16
Q

Sound the depths

A

Explore, investigate, or look into something really deeply. This expression is a metaphor based on the idea of a “sounding line,” which is a rope with a weight on the bottom that you drop to the ocean floor to see how deep the ocean is.

Other books have dealt with the topic in a superficial way, but this is the first book to really
sound the depths o f the response of the British lower class to the American Revolution.
17
Q

Steeped in

A

Immersed in, saturated with. A teabag steeps in hot water. A person steeped in classic literature probably thinks about almost everything in terms of old, famous books.

The Met’s new campaign seeks to answer affirmatively the question of whether music lovers
steeped in hip-hop and pop can learn to love opera.

18
Q

Take umbrage

A

Become offended.

With fifteen years of experience on all kinds of campaigns, she took umbrage to her sexist
coworker’s suggestion that she was only qualified to develop advertising for “women’s products.

19
Q

Vanguard and avant-garde

A

The avant-garde (French for in front of the guard) were the leading soldiers at the front o f an army. Vanguard is derived from avant-garde and means the same thing. Metaphorically, the avant-garde (noun or adjective) or vanguard (noun) are innovators, those at the forefront of any movement or those “ahead of their time.” Sometimes, the avant-garde seems a little
crazy or scary at first.

While Google has won the search engine wars, in 1994, Yahoo was on the vanguard of search
technology.

She arrived at the mixer in a dress that was a little avant-garde for the otherwise conservative
Yale Club—she would have looked more appropriate at an art gallery or Lady Gaga concert.