词组 | cost an arm and a leg |
释义 | Idiom cost an arm and a leg Theme: MONEY to cost too much. (Fixed order.)It cost an arm and a leg, so I didn't buy it.Why should a little plastic part cost an arm and a leg? Idiom cost an arm and a legcost (someone) an arm and a leg informal to be very expensive.These opera tickets cost us an arm and a leg! cost an arm and a legslang To cost lot of money. College tuitions cost an arm and leg nowadays. I'm sick of paying rent in this town because it costs an arm and a leg! cost an arm and a legIf something costs an arm and a leg, it costs a lot of money. It cost us an arm and a leg to get here. But it has been worth every penny and more. Note: Verbs such as pay, charge and spend are sometimes used instead of cost. Many restaurants were charging an arm and a leg for poor quality food. cost an arm and a legbe extremely expensive. informalcost/pay an ˌarm and a ˈleg(informal) cost/pay a lot of money: We want to redecorate the living room, but I’m afraid it’s going to cost us an arm and a leg.cost an arm and a leg/a pretty penny, toExcessively expensive, exorbitant. The first phrase is American in origin and dates from the mid-twentieth century. The source is obvious: giving up an arm and a leg to buy something is clearly too costly. The use of “pretty” to mean considerable in amount was originally British and is now archaic except in a few well-worn phrases like this one, a cliché since the late nineteenth century. It was common throughout the eighteenth century, and crossed the Atlantic as well (“The captain might still make a pretty penny,” Bret Harte, Maruja, 1885). A similar term was a fine penny, now obsolete. |
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