Speaking Your Best ™ Inc.

Accent Reduction for All Speakers!

Home

About Us

Clients

Success Stories

Accent Reduction Courses

Costs

Pay As You Go

7-Week Course

12-Week Course

24-Week Course

Video Conferencing

Telephone Classes

Policies

FAQ

Products

APALS Pronun/Lang. Screen

Consonant/Vowel Illustrat

SYB Self-Study Programs

Speaking Your Best Online

Accent Guides

Chinese Accent

Filipino Accent

Spanish Accent

French Accent

Japanese Accent

Indian Accent

Arabic Accent

Korean Accent

Russian Accent

Portuguese Accent

American English Tips

Learning American Accent

Chinese Accent Reduction

Spanish Accent Reduction

Indian Accent Reduction

Russian Accent Reduction

Japanese Accent Reduction

Arabic Accent Reduction

Site map

Contact Us

                            Tips to Improve American English Skills

      American Idioms Using the Word “Up:” What’s Up With That?

Idioms are expressions that mean something completely different from the literal translation of the words, and as we all know, American English is full of them.  Many idioms can be categorized in terms of categories or specific words they include.  Let’s take the word “up” for example.  This simple, two-letter word can be an adjective, noun, verb, preposition, or adverb.  It has more meaning than perhaps any other word in English!   American English incorporates this word into many, many expressions.  Let’s take a look at just a few of the ways the word “up” can be used in idioms.

Most of us “wake up” early during the week so that we can “get up” and get ready for work each day. Women often “fix up” their faces and their hair and “get dressed up” for work, while others go to work in casual attire.  Some of us have flexible work hours, while others with strict bosses may be “up the creek” if they are even one minute late.  It really is “up to” the individual person in charge.  We tend to “look up” to people we admire, and are encouraged to “speak up” at meetings.  Sometimes at work, we need to “write up” reports, “call up” customers, get "tied up" in meetings, and “think up” new ideas and concepts. 

Not everything goes well all the time in our daily lives.  No one “signs up” for difficult situations, but they are inevitable.  We sometimes “stir up” trouble when we don’t mean to, often have to “clean up” messes, "fix up" our cars when they break down, try to “think up” excuses for things when we get into trouble, "make up" with someone after an argument, "lawyer up" in a criminal case, and "tie up" loose ends.   At least we can relax at lunchtime, can’t we?  Well, after we “line up” to get our meals, we can sit and “chat up” our friends, and not get “hung up” with our problems. 

Yes, “up” seems to be everywhere.  If you “look it up” in the dictionary, you may be amazed at what you find.  Go to www.dictionary.com for instance, and take a look at the lengthy page of definitions for this word. You may “wind up” needing reading glasses after you read it, because it will “take up” a lot of your time. 

I could go on and on about the word “up”, but I’ll leave the rest “up to” you. See how many expressions using “up” you can think of, and don’t “give up!”  Maybe you’ll “come up” with a hundred!


                                                                        
Cheryl A. Posey, MS CCC-SLP
Speaking Your Best, Inc.
(774) 212 3241
speakingyourbest@gmail.com
                                                                               
 


Copyright 2011, Speaking Your Best, Inc.
 
All rights reserved

Web Hosting powered by Network Solutions®