Monday, June 1, 2009

The Humble Foot

The Humble Foot
For obvious reasons, the word for foot is one of the oldest in the language:

O.E. fot, from P.Gmc. *fot (cf. O.N. fotr, Du. voet, Ger. Fuß, Goth. fotus “foot”), from PIE *pod-/*ped- (cf. Avestan pad-; Skt. pat, acc. padam “foot;” Gk. pos, Attic pous, gen. podos; L. pes, gen. pedis “foot;” Lith. padas “sole,” peda “footstep”).


Like other body parts, foot has found its way into numerous idiomatic expressions. Here are just a few.

foot the bill — to pay for something, usually for something one would rather not pay for oneself: I’ll go to the convention if the company will foot the bill.

put your foot in your mouth - to say something one regrets immediately (or should!): You put your foot in your mouth with that remark about her hat.

have one foot in the grave - about to die: When you had the flu, you looked as if you had one foot in the grave.

to have itchy feet- to have a frequent desire to travel: He’s not a good marriage prospect; he has itchy feet.

to get cold feet- to feel sudden misgivings about doing something one had planned to do: It’s the morning of the wedding and the bride has cold feet.

to get off on the wrong foot–to begin an enterprise by doing something inappropriate: Susie got off on the wrong foot with her old-fashioned boss when she told him she didn’t make coffee.

to get off on the right foot - to start out doing everything right: The new fireman got off on the right foot when he saved that baby.

to put one’s best foot forward - to present oneself at one’s best: She bought a new dress and had her hair done because she wanted to put her best foot forward for the job interview.

to land on your feet to come through a difficult situation without harm: Don’t worry about Jack in this storm. He always lands on his feet.

to drag your feet to be reluctant: Stop dragging your feet and mow the grass!

to have your feet on the ground - to have a practical outlook: His decision to put off the move until he’s sure he has the job shows he has his feet on the ground.

not to put a foot wrong- to do everything according to rule and expectation: Mr. Perfect there never puts a foot wrong with the boss.

to have feet that hardly touch the ground to move quickly: On the day of the church picnic, her feet hardly touched the ground.

to put one’s feet up - to relax: Now that you’ve finished the project, you can put your feet up for awhile.

to put one’s foot down - to take a firm stand: When little Jimmy kicked the dog, his father finally put his foot down.

My foot! - expression of disbelief: Abner Potts made a perfect score on the SAT? My foot!

About Determination

Hi Guys,

Something to think about.

Mr Gregory

Friday, May 29, 2009

More Hols!

Scheduled School Holidays for 2009
Holiday Date
Youth Day Sunday 5th July*
Teachers’ Day Tuesday 1st September
Children’s Day Thursday 1st October#

* The following Monday will be a scheduled school holiday.
# For primary schools and primary sections of full schools only

Newslink

Academic Resources

SPH Newslink - Newslink
(an online newspaper archival service, which offers archived news articles and information from 12 unique newspapers published by Singapore Press Holdings.)

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

June Holiday Assignments

Hi All,

I have attached a soft copy of the tasks.This is just in case some of you might have misplaced them.

Mr Gregory


http://www.scribd.com/share/upload/12281571/24kxfnvytsq52tidnqjh

Welcome


Hi Class,

This is the opening post and greetings!

Please feel free to navigate this blog and keep a look out for updates,new resource materials and of course any queries which I will try my best to answer.

Cheers
Mr Gregory