Idiom: GET COLD FEET - English Vocabulary #shorts
Today's idiom is "get cold feet." Now, if someone says they got cold feet and didn't do something, does that mean their feet were literally cold?
Now, if you get cold feet, you suddenly become too frightened or too nervous to do whatever you were planning to do.
Here are a few examples to illustrate:
• John was all set to propose to his girlfriend, but he got cold feet and he decided to wait.
• Some of them got cold feet and they wanted to shut down the company.
• Emily had planned to speak up during the meeting and share an idea, but she got cold feet at the last minute and didn't say anything.
When's the last time you got cold feet and didn't do what you were planning to do?
I hope that helps. Thanks for watching. See you next time!
https://organicenglish.club/resources
❖ Support the channel HERE 👋🏽: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/organicenglish
More from Organic English:
Organic English Website: http://bit.ly/Organic-Web
On Facebook: http://bit.ly/Organic-Facebook
On Instagram: http://bit.ly/Organic-Insta
SUBSCRIBE ➡️ http://bit.ly/Subscribe2OrganicEnglish
#English #LearnEnglish #EnglishLanguage #IELTS #TOEFL #ESL #idioms #english #vocabulary #learnenglish #grammar #ielts #englishteacher #englishvocabulary #englishlearning #englishidioms #englishgrammar #englishtips #englishlanguage #phrasalverbs #toefl #education #studyenglish #learningenglish #learning #phrases #speakenglish #idiom #englishclass #esl #ingles #language #englishcourse #proverbs #vocab #learnenglishonline
Comments
Post a Comment