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الالعام لمادة اللغة الانجليزية

idioms " letter c "

catch a cold
– get a cold
I caught a bad cold last week and had to miss three weeks of work.

catch one’s death of cold– become very ill (with a cold, flu etc.)
The little boy was told to be careful in the rain or he would catch his death of cold.

check-up
– a periodic inspection of a patient by a doctor
I went to have my annual check-up last week.

clean bill of health
– a report or certificate that a person or animal is healthy
The doctor gave me a clean bill of health when I visited him last month.

come down with– become sick with, catch
My niece came down with a bad cold and was unable to visit me last week.

couch doctor
– a psychoanalyst who puts his patients on a couch
He was sent to see a couch doctor after his continued problems at work.

dose/taste of one’s own medicine
– being treated in the same way as one treats others (usually a negative meaning)
Our boss got a taste of his own medicine when people began to ignore him as he had always done to them.

draw blood– make someone bleed, get blood from someone
The doctor decided to draw some blood from the patient to check up on his blood sugar level.

التصنيفات
الالعام لمادة اللغة الانجليزية

more idioms

fall ill

– become sick or ill
The man fell ill last winter and has not recovered yet.

feel on top of the world– feel very healthy
I have been feeling on top of the world since I quit my job.

flare up
– to begin again suddenly (illness etc.)
My mother’s skin problems flared up when she started to use the new laundry soap.

flare-up
– a sudden worsening of a health condition
His arthritus usually flares up every winter.

go under the knife
– be operated on in surgery
His wife went under the knife at the hospital last evening.

hang out one’s shingle
– give public notice of the opening of a doctor’s office etc.
The doctor decided to hang out his shingle as soon as he finished medical school.

have a physical (examination)
– get a medical check-up
Our company sent all the employees to have a physical last week.

head shrinker
– a psychiatrist
The man was told to go and see a head shrinker after he threatened the woman in the store several times.

just what the doctor ordered
– exactly what is needed or wanted
A nice hot bath was just what the doctor ordered.

التصنيفات
الالعام لمادة اللغة الانجليزية

last medical idioms

[LEFT]look the picture of health
– be in good health
My uncle was looking the picture of health when I saw him last week.

on the mend
– healing, becoming better
My grandfather is on the mend after he broke his leg last week.

out cold
– unconscious, in a faint
As soon as the patient entered the operating room he was out cold because of the anesthesia.

over the worst
– recovering from an illness
My brother is over the worst since his skiing accident last month.
pull through
– recover from a serious illness
The car accident was very bad and I don’t think that the driver will pull through.

run a temperature
– have a higher than normal body temperature
The little boy is running a temperature and should stay in bed all day.

run down
– get into poor condition
He was working very hard last month and has become very run down.

run some tests
– a doctor does some medical tests on a patient
The doctor has decided to run some tests on the patient.

splitting headache
– a severe headache
I have been suffering from a splitting headache all morning.

take a turn for the worse
– become sicker
My aunt took a turn for the worse last week and is still in the hospital.
take someone’s temperature
– measure someone’s body temperature
The nurse took my temperature when I went to the hospital yesterday.

throw up
– vomit
The woman threw up several times after eating the bad shellfish.

under the weather
– not feeling well
My boss has been feeling under the weather all week and has not come to work during that time. [/LEFT]

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