Set the Thames on fire meaning
What does the saying 'Set the Thames on fire' mean?
Idiom: Set the Thames on fire
Meaning:
If you do something remarkable, you set the Thames on fire, though this expression is used in the negative; someone who is dull or undistiguished will never set the Thames on fire.
Similar Idioms
- Under fire
- Fire away
- Out of the frying pan, into the fire
- Fat hits the fire
- Baptism of fire
- Irons in the fire
- Play with fire
- Add fuel to the fire
- Sure-fire
- Get on like a house on fire
- Pull the fat from the fire
- Pull out of the fire
- Mud in the fire
- No smoke without fire
- As much use as a chocolate fire-guard
- Too many irons in the fire
- Light a fire under
- On fire
- Hair on fire
- Iron in the fire
- Fight fire with fire
- Hold fire
- Hang fire
- Fire on all cylinders
- Where there's smoke, there's fire
- Fire in the hole!
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See also:
- View examples in Google: Set the Thames on fire
- Idiom Quizzes