BRITISH SLANGS FOR IELTS (Part 5)
- Blinkered - Someone who is
blinkered is narrow minded or narrow sighted - they only see one view on a
subject. It comes from when horses that pulled carriages wore blinkers to stop
them seeing to the side or behind them which stopped them from being startled
and only let them see where they were going.
- Bloody - One of the
most useful swear words in English. Mostly used as an exclamation of surprise
i.e. "bloody hell" or "bloody nora". Something may be
"bloody marvellous" or "bloody awful". It is also used to
emphasise almost anything, "you're bloody mad", "not bloody
likely" and can also be used in the middle of other words to emphasise
them. E.g. "Abso-bloody-lutely"! Americans should avoid saying
"bloody" as they sound silly.
- Blooming - Another
alternative to the word bloody. You might hear someone say "not
blooming likely" so that they don't have to swear.
- Blow me - When an
English colleague of mine exclaimed "Blow Me" in front of a large
American audience, he brought the house down. It is simply an exclamation of
surprise, short for "Blow me down", meaning something like I am so
surprised you could knock me over just by blowing. Similar to "Well knock
me down with a feather". It is not a request for services to be performed.
- Blunt - If a saw or a
knife is not sharp we say it is blunt. It is also the way most of us speak! In
America the knife would be dull.
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