This document discusses common food idioms used in the English language. Some examples are "slower than molasses" meaning very slow, "walk on eggs" meaning to be very careful, and "piece of cake" meaning something is very easy. Other idioms mentioned are "big cheese" referring to the most important person, "take it with a grain of salt" meaning to be skeptical, and "nutty as a fruitcake" referring to someone who is crazy.
This document discusses common food idioms used in the English language. Some examples are "slower than molasses" meaning very slow, "walk on eggs" meaning to be very careful, and "piece of cake" meaning something is very easy. Other idioms mentioned are "big cheese" referring to the most important person, "take it with a grain of salt" meaning to be skeptical, and "nutty as a fruitcake" referring to someone who is crazy.
This document discusses common food idioms used in the English language. Some examples are "slower than molasses" meaning very slow, "walk on eggs" meaning to be very careful, and "piece of cake" meaning something is very easy. Other idioms mentioned are "big cheese" referring to the most important person, "take it with a grain of salt" meaning to be skeptical, and "nutty as a fruitcake" referring to someone who is crazy.