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  • - Hello everyone and welcome back to English With Lucy.

  • Today I am bringing you loads of idioms

  • related to sickness, illness and health,

  • so it's really going to help you

  • improve your English vocabulary

  • and it's going to help you sound more like a native.

  • Before we get started,

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  • Right, let's get started with the lesson.

  • The first idiom is actually one used to say

  • you don't feel unwell, you feel very good,

  • it is to feel as fit as a fiddle

  • and a fiddle is another word for a violin,

  • so if you feel as fit as a fiddle, you feel great,

  • I, right now feel as fit as a fiddle.

  • Another one is to be a picture of health,

  • if you are a picture of health,

  • you are a great example of good health,

  • you could say, my friend was struggling with an illness,

  • but now she is a picture of health,

  • she is really, really healthy.

  • Now the next one is negative

  • and this is to have a splitting headache

  • and to have a splitting headache

  • is to have a really, really bad headache,

  • can you imagine it, to split your head?

  • Very painful, anyone who has suffered

  • with a migraine will understand that,

  • I've only had one in my life,

  • but it was a very, very bad couple of days.

  • The next one is one you have probably heard before,

  • because when I ask for examples of idioms from my students,

  • they always say this one or it's raining cats and dogs,

  • which is an idiom we don't use very frequently,

  • but the one I want to talk about

  • is to be, look or feel under the weather,

  • I normally use it with look, I might say,

  • ooh, you look a bit under the weather

  • and then the person could reply,

  • yes, I am feeling a bit under the weather

  • and this means to look, feel or be unwell,

  • it's quite a nice way of saying it,

  • because you don't want to say to someone, you look dreadful,

  • you want to say, you look a little bit under the weather,

  • are you unwell, are you feeling okay?

  • The next one is another negative one,

  • it is to take a turn for the worse,

  • if you take a turn for the worse,

  • it means you are iller or sicker than you were before,

  • so I could say, I had a cold,

  • but then I took a turn for the worse

  • and I had to go to hospital, so I was quite ill

  • and then I got really ill and I had to go to hospital,

  • you can use it in a positive way,

  • you can say, to take a turn for the better,

  • but it's not as common.

  • The next one is to be black and blue,

  • I wonder if you can guess

  • what this one might be, black and blue?

  • If you're black and blue,

  • it means that you have quite a few bruises,

  • so the marks you get after you've been hit,

  • so if you are very bruised, then you could say

  • that you are black and blue, this relates to the next one,

  • because the next one is to take a tumble,

  • if you have taken a tumble, it means you have fallen over,

  • so if you fall over and you get bruises,

  • you can say, ooh, I've taken a tumble

  • and I'm black and blue,

  • see if your English teacher understands you,

  • when you say that. (laughs)

  • The next one is to go under the knife,

  • this means to have an operation,

  • but it also can refer to cosmetic surgery,

  • so if somebody says, she's been under the knife,

  • it means she's had cosmetic surgery,

  • but if I said, I had a really sore leg,

  • but I went under the knife,

  • it means I had a sore leg, but now I've had an operation.

  • Now the next one is to be on one's last legs

  • and this means that somebody is very close to exhaustion,

  • to being very, very tired and collapsing or even death,

  • so if somebody says, I think they're on their last legs,

  • it means, I don't think they're going to live very long,

  • which is obviously very, very, very sad,

  • but in Britain especially,

  • we like to use a lot of idiomatic phrases

  • around very serious situations,

  • so instead of to die, we say to pop one's clogs,

  • you've popped your clogs,

  • it's just a way of dealing with something quite serious,

  • so if someone's on their last legs,

  • we're not trying to be funny, we're not joking,

  • we just, that's how we deal

  • with a really difficult, sad situation.

  • Another one that's quite similar

  • is to be hanging by a thread,

  • it means you're very close to either

  • the situation becoming very serious or even to death.

  • The last one is actually my favourite health-related idiom,

  • because it's so funny, (laughs)

  • I find it really funny,

  • it is to feel like, or to look like death warmed up,

  • again, this is an idiom, I would love to know

  • if you have an example of this one in your own language,

  • if somebody looks just dreadful, so ill, so unwell,

  • pale, grey, big bags under their eyes,

  • you can tell them they look like death warmed up,

  • it's just such a funny phrase,

  • you can't not smile, when somebody says that to you,

  • unless you're feeling like death warmed up of course.

  • So yeah, see if you can use that

  • in conversation with a native,

  • because I think they will really find that quite funny.

  • Right guys, that's it for today's lesson,

  • don't forget to check out Lingoda,

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  • and I will see you soon for another lesson, muah.

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