Idioms with like as a preposition word order exercises
A LESSON PLAN FOR ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHERS
Idioms with the preposition like presentation and practice
Lesson Plan Content:
Idioms with like as a preposition word order exercises
Put the preposition like into the place or places below where it is necessary to make sense and/ or be grammatically correct. Sometimes more than one “like” is necessary
- Float a butterfly, sting a bee (= quote by Mohammed Ali on his boxing style)
- He took to it a duck to water (= he adapted to it very quickly because it suited him)
- He will rise a phoenix from the ashes (= he will quickly recover from his bankruptcy, scandal or other disaster)
- If it looks a duck and it quacks a duck, it probably is a duck (= sometimes the simplest explanation is correct, e.g. that they appear to be doing something bad because they are doing something bad)
- It looks a bomb has hit it (= it’s incredibly messy)
- I’ll come down on him a ton of bricks (= I’ll criticise and/ or punish him severely)
- Life is a box of chocolates (= you never know what you’re going to get – quote from the Tom Hanks movie Forrest Gump).
- Father, son (= characteristics such as skills tend to run down families)
- Nothing succeeds success (= once people see you winning, earning money, etc, they will support you more)
- There's no fool an old fool (= people who think they already know everything make the worst mistakes)
- There's no place home (= the place you are from is best)
- There's no time the present (= you should do it as soon as possible, without delay)
- They are running around headless chickens (= they are busy but have no plan)
- When all you have is a hammer, everything looks a nail (= people tend to use what they know and have available to solve problems which don’t match at all)
- With friends that, who needs enemies? (= not all help from people who claim to be your allies actually helps)
- You look the cat who swallowed the canary (= you seem very satisfied, as if you got exactly what you wanted)
Put the words in each line into order to make idioms with like as a preposition.
- he like money spends water (= he doesn’t limit his spending)
- a cat Cheshire grinning he like was (= he was showing how happy he was, like the character from Alice In Wonderland)
- a a have I like memory sieve (= I can’t remember anything)
- a going I’m king like live to (= I will have a luxurious life)
- a built he is like tank (= he is large, and probably very muscular)
- a it like out sore sticks thumb (= it is very obvious, for example because it’s in the wrong place)
- are dropping flies like they (= they are literally or metaphorically dying)
- in like packed sardines we were (= there was very little space and too many people)
- a fire get house like on we (= we get along really well = we have a really good relationship)
Check as a class or below.
Suggested answers
- Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee.
- He took to it like a duck to water.
- He will rise like a phoenix from the ashes.
- If it looks like a duck and it quacks like a duck, it probably is a duck.
- It looks like a bomb has hit it.
- I’ll come down on him like a ton of bricks.
- Life is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you’re going to get.
- Like father, like son.
- Nothing succeeds like success.
- There's no fool like an old fool.
- There's no place like home.
- There's no time like the present.
- They are running around like headless chickens.
- When all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
- With friends like that, who needs enemies?
- You look like the cat who swallowed the canary.
- He spends money like water.
- He was grinning like a Cheshire cat.
- I have a memory like a sieve.
- I’m going to live like a king.
- He is built like a tank.
- It sticks out like a sore thumb.
- They are dropping like flies.
- We were packed in like sardines.
- We get on like a house on fire.
Test each other on the idioms:
- say a phrase with a word missing for your partner to complete
- giving the meaning, key words, etc until your partner can make the whole idiom that you chose
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