Category Archives: Idioms

Heart Idioms

💡 Why Teach “Heart Idioms”?

Idioms with “heart” are emotionally rich and often used in everyday speech. They’re a great way to:

  • Expand vocabulary in a fun, memorable way

  • Explore metaphor and figurative language

  • Help students sound more natural and expressive

  • Connect language to culture and emotions


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🧑‍🏫 Step-by-Step: How to Teach Heart Idioms

1. Introduce in Context, Not in Isolation

Advise teachers to avoid long lists of idioms. Instead, introduce 5–7 idioms at a time within a theme or situation, such as love, kindness, or honesty. Use short dialogues, story excerpts, or video clips where idioms appear naturally.

Example:
“Even though she was angry, she forgave him—she really has a heart of gold.”

2. Use Visuals and Body Language

Idioms like “heart skips a beat” or “follow your heart” lend themselves well to visuals. Encourage teachers to:

  • Use emojis or heart icons

  • Show short skits or videos

  • Ask students to act out idioms (e.g., miming a “broken heart”)

3. Teach Meaning + Literal vs Figurative

Students often struggle when idioms seem illogical. Help teachers create a chart for each idiom with:

  • Literal meaning (if applicable)

  • Figurative meaning

  • Example sentence

  • Native language equivalent (optional)

“To wear your heart on your sleeve”

  • Literal: Having a heart outside your body (confusing!)

  • Figurative: Showing your emotions openly

  • Example: “He wears his heart on his sleeve—everyone knows how he feels.”

4. Reinforce Through Speaking and Writing

Encourage practice by integrating idioms into student writing and conversation:

  • Ask students to write short stories using two idioms

  • Create dialogue pairs who must include a heart idiom in their conversation

  • Run a game like “Idiom Charades” or “Match the Idiom to the Emotion”


📝 Suggested Heart Idioms for Teaching

  • To have a heart of gold

  • To break someone’s heart

  • To have a change of heart

  • To cross your heart (and hope to die)

  • To take something to heart

  • To learn by heart

  • To follow your heart

  • My heart goes out to you

  • A heart-to-heart (conversation)


đź’¬ Encourage Cultural Exploration

Remind students that idioms reflect values and communication styles. Let students share similar expressions in their native languages, which:

  • Encourages cross-cultural comparisons

  • Builds deeper understanding

  • Makes class more engaging and personal

Worksheet: Idioms of the Heart

Level: Intermediate to Upper-Intermediate
Topic: Heart Idioms
Skill Focus: Vocabulary, reading, speaking, and writing


❤️ Part 1: Match the Idiom to Its Meaning

Match the idioms on the left with their meanings on the right.

Idiom Meaning
1. Heart of gold A. Feel deep sympathy for someone
2. Break someone’s heart B. A sincere, emotional conversation
3. Change of heart C. To memorize something completely
4. Cross your heart D. Someone very kind and generous
5. Take something to heart E. Make someone very sad
6. My heart goes out to you F. Promise sincerely
7. Learn by heart G. Take something very personally
8. Heart-to-heart H. Change your opinion or feelings about something

❤️ Part 2: Fill in the Blanks

Use the correct heart idiom to complete each sentence.

  1. I didn’t mean to hurt her, but I think I really ____________________.

  2. He has a ____________________. He always helps others.

  3. I had a ____________________ and decided to forgive her.

  4. She always takes criticism ____________________. She’s very sensitive.

  5. We had a ____________________ last night. I feel much closer to her now.

  6. I swear I’ll keep your secret. ____________________!

  7. I had to ____________________ all the vocabulary for the test.

  8. When I heard about the earthquake, ____________________ the victims.


❤️ Part 3: Speaking Practice

Work in pairs. Ask and answer the following questions using at least one idiom in your answer.

  1. Have you ever had a change of heart about something important? What happened?

  2. Can you describe someone you know who has a heart of gold?

  3. When was the last time your heart went out to someone?

  4. Do you usually wear your heart on your sleeve or keep your feelings hidden?


❤️ Part 4: Creative Writing

Write a short paragraph (5–7 sentences) about a time you felt strong emotions. Try to use at least two heart idioms from this worksheet.


Teacher Tip: Review idioms with pictures or short video clips beforehand to build understanding. For extra support, allow students to use bilingual dictionaries for idioms

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You should know by heart all these idioms.

Cross my heart, I’m telling the truth.

He wears his heart on his sleeve.

She’s had her heart broken before.

He is the heart and sole of the team.

I’d be there in a heartbeat if you need me.

They’ve got their hearts set on that house.

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image from http://englishstudyhere.com

Common Idioms

đź§  Why Teach Idioms?

Idioms are fixed expressions like “break the ice” or “under the weather” that have meanings different from the literal meanings of the individual words. They’re important because:

  • Idioms appear often in spoken and informal written English

  • They enrich vocabulary and help students sound more natural

  • Understanding idioms improves listening and reading comprehension

However, idioms are often difficult for ESL students because they can’t be translated word-for-word and don’t follow grammar rules clearly.

CLICK HERE for my “English Language Songs” and Worksheets


🧑‍🏫 How to Teach Idioms to ESL Students

1. Choose Relevant Idioms

Start with high-frequency, concrete, and contextual idioms—especially those used in everyday conversation, like:

  • It’s raining cats and dogs (raining heavily)

  • Hit the books (to study)

  • Piece of cake (easy)

  • Cost an arm and a leg (very expensive)

✅ Choose 5–10 idioms that relate to a theme (e.g., school, feelings, body, weather).


2. Teach Idioms in Context

Never teach idioms in isolation. Use stories, dialogues, or images to show the idiom in use.

âś… Example:

Sarah was nervous before the presentation, but her teacher told her to break a leg.
Ask: “What do you think that means? Was it literal?”

Encourage students to guess the meaning based on the context. This builds inference skills.


3. Break Down the Idiom

After context:

  • Explain the idiom’s meaning clearly

  • Give one or two more example sentences

  • Highlight if it’s formal or informal, and how it’s used grammatically

âś… Activity: Match idioms with their meanings or example sentences.


4. Encourage Usage

Provide chances for students to use the idioms:

  • Create a short dialogue using 2 idioms

  • Write a mini story or comic strip with 3 idioms

  • Use “Idiom of the Week” and challenge students to use it in conversation or writing

✅ Speaking games like “Idiom Charades” or “Guess the Idiom” are fun and effective.


5. Visuals Help

Idioms are more memorable when paired with images or gestures. Create visual flashcards or have students illustrate idioms.

âś… Tip: Let students draw or act out the literal and actual meanings to reinforce learning.


✏️ Teacher Tips

  • Avoid overwhelming students—teach a few idioms at a time

  • Recycle idioms regularly in reading, writing, and speaking tasks

  • Keep a class idiom wall or idiom journal for ongoing review

CLICK HERE for my “English Language Songs” and Worksheets

(image from trongduc25789)

Above are common idioms with meanings and examples.

A blessing in disguise, actions speak louder than words, a piece of cake, beating around the bush, break a leg, can’t stand it, check out that, close but no cigar, don’t sweat it, driving me bananas, easier said than done, get over it.

CLICK HERE for my “English Language Songs” and Worksheets

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đź“… LESSON PLAN: Common Idioms

Level: Intermediate ESL
Time: 45–60 minutes
Focus: Vocabulary (Idioms), Listening, Speaking, Reading, Writing

Objectives

  • Understand the meanings of common idioms in context

  • Use idioms correctly in writing and speaking

  • Recognize idioms in reading and listening tasks

Materials

  • Idiom worksheet (included)

  • Idiom picture cards (included)

  • Whiteboard or projector

Warm-Up (5–10 mins)

  • Ask: “Do you know any strange English expressions? What do they mean?”

  • Share an idiom like “It’s a piece of cake” and ask students to guess what it means

Presentation (10 mins)

  • Show 5 idioms with meanings, images, and example sentences

  • Elicit ideas: What might this idiom mean?

Guided Practice (15 mins)

  • Use idiom picture cards and match them with definitions and example sentences

  • Students complete matching and gap-fill exercises from the worksheet

Speaking Practice (10 mins)

  • Students choose 2 idioms and create a short dialogue or mini-story in pairs

  • Present to the class or another pair

Wrap-Up (5 mins)

  • Review key idioms with a quick game: “Guess the Idiom” (teacher gives definition, students guess)

  • Assign homework: Use 3 idioms in a journal entry


đź—‹ WORKSHEET: Common Idioms Practice

Part A: Match the Idiom to Its Meaning

  1. Break the ice

  2. Under the weather

  3. Cost an arm and a leg

  4. Piece of cake

  5. Hit the books

A. Easy to do
B. Study hard
C. Help people feel comfortable
D. Very expensive
E. Feeling sick

Write the correct match:

  1. ___ 2. ___ 3. ___ 4. ___ 5. ___


Part B: Fill in the Blank with the Correct Idiom

  1. I stayed home today because I was feeling _____________________.

  2. The new phone I want _____________________. I need to save money!

  3. I have a test tomorrow. Time to _____________________.

  4. Speaking English in front of the class helped _____________________.

  5. Don’t worry about the exam. It will be a _____________________.


Part C: Create Your Own Dialogue

Use at least 2 idioms from the lesson in a short conversation between two people:






🎨 IDIOM PICTURE CARDS (Description)

Use these with flashcards or slides. Each card should show:

  1. Idiom: Break the ice
    Image: People meeting for the first time, someone telling a joke Meaning: To make people feel relaxed in a new situation

  2. Idiom: Under the weather
    Image: Person in bed with tissues and a thermometer Meaning: To feel sick or unwell

  3. Idiom: Cost an arm and a leg
    Image: Price tag with arms and legs drawn on it Meaning: Something very expensive

  4. Idiom: Piece of cake
    Image: A cake and a thumbs-up sign Meaning: Something very easy

  5. Idiom: Hit the books
    Image: A student surrounded by textbooks Meaning: To study hard


Tip: Laminate cards or show them in a digital slideshow for reuse.

CLICK HERE for my “English Language Songs” and Worksheets