Every country or nation has got their own idioms that are specific to their own culture, while many idioms have synonyms in several countries,what refers to the equal shared human nature in many cultures. Learning the specific idioms related to a certain culture helps you learn more about the history, customary beliefs, social forms, and material traits of it.
One of the keys to speaking like a native is the ability to use andunderstand casual expressions, or idioms. American English is full of idioms. You won’t learn these expressions in a standard textbook. But you will hear them all the time in everyday conversations. You’ll also meet them in books, newspapers, magazines, TV shows, and on the Internet. Idioms add color to the language. Master idioms and your speech will be less awkward, less foreign. You’ll also understand more of what you read and hear. In this blog you will find different articles in where teachers will have some ideas at the same time that kids will learn more vocabulary by the use of stories and practices. In this blog idioms are going to be classify by:
- Colors.
- Food.
- Numbers.
- Parts of the body.
- People.
- Animals.
- Geography.
- Recreation.
- Medicine.
- Plants.
- Clothes.
- Time.
- Weather.
Now teachers you can introduce the topic by the use of this video. Enjoy the idioms´ world.
By: M.Ed Andrea Villegas