Idioms for Autumn

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With the sun setting earlier, the leaves changing colour, and a slight chill in the air, we’re ready to start slowing down and enjoying cosy evenings in with hot drinks and blankets. Here are twenty idioms for the autumn season:

  1. a bad apple – a bad influence/someone who brings trouble
  2. apple of (someone’s) eye – the person someone most loves/cherishes/admires
  3. can’t see the wood for the trees – unable to grasp the main issue/wider picture due to being too focused on specific details
  4. lost in the mists of time – long forgotten
  5. neck of the woods – a particular area/neighbourhood
  6. old chestnut – a story/joke made tedious by repetition
  7. out of the woods – out of danger
  8. out on a limb – isolated/unsupported
  9. raining cats and dogs – raining heavily
  10. shaking like a leaf – trembling (usually with fear)
  11. the apple never falls far from the tree – important family traits are usually inherited
  12. the autumn years – the later years of life
  13. to bark up the wrong tree – to follow the wrong line of thought/to make a false assumption or mistake/to completely misunderstand something
  14. to be nuts about someone/something – to really like someone/something
  15. to drive someone nuts – to excessively annoy someone/to make someone feel crazy
  16. to get wind of something – to hear a rumour about something
  17. to save for a rainy day – to save for a future time when money might be scarce to squirrel away – to hide something of value in a safe place
  18. to turn over a new leaf – to begin to behave in a more responsible manner
  19. under the weather – ill/unwell

If you enjoyed this post, why not check out our other articles about idioms?


24 Oct 2018
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"Spellzone fits in beautifully with our Scope and Sequence of Phonological Awareness and Spelling. It also aligns perfectly with the four areas of spelling knowledge and uses the Brain, Ears, Eyes approach to learning spelling."
Thank you!

Teacher, Australia