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Interesting and authentic spoken English containing fruits

#英语# Introduction When learning English, in addition to memorizing words, the most important thing for application environments such as speaking and writing is to master phrases and phrases. Mastering the most basic phrases is to learn English well. Basic skills, the following “Fun and Authentic English Speaking Including Fruit” by!

1. To compare “apples and oranges” is to uselessly compare unlike things.

It is meaningless to compare two unrelated things.

2. The “apple of (one’s) eye” is a favorite or well-like person.

The apple of your eye.

3. To say that “the apple never falls far from the tree” is to suggest that a person’s personality traits are close to those of the person’s parents.

Like father, like son, a saying that describes someone’s personality being similar to that of his or her parents.

4. "As American as apple pie" means that something is quintessentially representative of American culture or values.

Typical American style (apple filling is a standard American after-dinner dessert) refers to something that is representative of typical American culture or values.

5. “(As) sure as God made little green apples” suggests certainty.

Undoubtedly, hinting at the possibility.

6. To be a “bad apple” or a “rotten apple” is to be a bad person.

Bad guy.

7. “One bad (or rotten) apple spoils the whole bunch (or barrel)” implies that one flawed element or person can undermine an effort or a group.

A smelly fish fills up a pot of soup.

8. To be “rotten to the core” is to be thoroughly bad or worthless.

It’s so bad and completely worthless.

9. To “polish (one’s) apple” is to flatter someone; a flatterer is an “apple polisher.

To flatter someone; apple polisher is a horse*jing.

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10. To “upset the apple cart” is to ruin plans.

11. A “banana republic” is a weak or corrupt country.

Banana ***和国 (referring to a weak or * country)

12. A “second banana” is a subordinate, and the “top banana” is the leader.

Second banana refers to subordinates, and top banana refers to leader.

13. To “go bananas” is to become excited or crazed, and “to drive (someone) bananas” is to annoy or irritate someone.

Go bananas to become excited and crazy, to drive (someone) bananas to annoy someone.

14. To “cherry-pick” is to select carefully.

Choose carefully.

15. "Life is a bowl of cherries" means that life is easy.

Life is like a bowl of cherries, implying that life is beautiful and simple. In the same way, if you say that life is unsatisfactory ten times, you can say this: Life isn’t always a bowl of cherries.

16. To “not give a fig” is to be unconcerned.

Don’t care.

17. “Melon” is sometimes used as slang for head or, vulgarly, for large breasts.

"Melon" melon sometimes means "head" in slang, and it can also mean "big breasts" in vulgar terms.

18. To say that someone or something is a “peach” means that they are beautiful, excellent, or sweet.

If someone or something is said to be like a peach, it means that they are beautiful, excellent or sweet.

19. When everything is “peaches and cream,” life is going well.

It means that life is going smoothly.

 20. A “plum” assignment or job is a highly coveted one.

A job or reward that many people covet.

 21. One is said to have “sour grapes” when one belittles something one covets but cannot obtain.

If you can’t eat grapes, you say sour grapes, which is called sour grapes in English.

22. Forbidden fruit” is something attractive but not allowed.

Forbidden fruit refers to things that attract people but cannot be touched.

23. To "bear fruit" is to produce results.

Have results, have results.