IELTS Idioms for Trouble and Difficulty
1) be asking for trouble
Meaning- If someone is asking for trouble, they are behaving in a way that makes it very likely that they will have problems.
Example- Riding a bicycle in town after dark without lights is just asking for trouble.
2) bite off more than you can chew
Meaning- If you bite off more than you can chew, you try to do a task that is too big for you or too difficult.
Example- I didn't know if I could memorize a text of that length and started to worry that I had bitten off more than I could chew.
3) a Catch 22
Meaning- A Catch 22 is an extremely frustrating situation in which one thing cannot happen until another thing has happened, but the other thing cannot happen until the first thing has happened.
Example- There's a Catch 22 in finding a job. You need the experience to get work and you need work to get experience.
Example- It's a Catch 22 situation here. Nobody wants to support you until you're successful but without the support, how can you ever be successful?
4) a/the fly in the ointment
Meaning- If someone or something is a fly in the ointment they prevent a situation from being as successful or happy as it would be without them.
Example- The only fly in the ointment is Bella's lack of concentration.
5) not have a leg to stand on
Meaning- If someone does not have a leg to stand on they are in a very weak position, because they cannot prove a claim or statement they have made.
Example- You'd never win if you went to court. Our lawyers said you wouldn't have a leg to stand on.
6) in over your head
Meaning- If you are in over your head you are in a situation that is too difficult for you to deal with.
Example- He realized that he was in over his head, and that only his family could help him.
Example- Kelly told the hearing he got in way over his head and became afraid after the prisoner threatened him and his family.
7) out of the frying pan into the fire or from the frying pan into the fire
Meaning- If someone has gone out of the frying pan into the fire or from the frying pan into the fire, they have moved from a bad situation to an even worse one.
Example- I was hoping to get my career back on track after a bad time, but as it turned out, I'd gone out of the frying pan into the fire.
8) an own goal
Meaning- An own goal is a a course of action which is intended to bring you an advantage and which instead causes a problem for you. [BRITISH]
Example- It was a classic own goal by the fashion house. They brought their prices down to attract more customers but lost the high-end customers that they already had.
9) put your foot in it
Meaning- If you put your foot in it you say something which embarrasses or offends the person you are with, and embarrasses you as a result.
Example- I put my foot in it straight away, referring to folk music. Tom sat forward and glared. 'It's not folk music, man. It's heritage music.'
10) a stumbling block
Meaning- If you describe something as a stumbling block you mean it is a problem which stops you from achieving something.
Example- It's her attitude that's the biggest stumbling block.
11) teething problemsor teething troubles
Meaning- Teething problems or teething troubles are problems in the early stages of something. Example- There are bound to be teething problems in a new marriage.
Example- Some teething troubles aside, the new computer system works well.
12) a viciouscircle
Meaning- If you describe a difficult situation as a vicious circle you mean that one problem has caused other problems which, in turn, have made the original problem even worse.
Example- The economy couldn't create jobs because consumers weren't spending. Consumers weren't spending because the economy wasn't creating jobs. And this was the vicious circle we were caught in.
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