Idioms with body parts 4
to cost an arm and a leg, an eye for an eye approach, one's ears are burning, the case at hand, to get back on one's feet, to see the back of somebody, something want to somebody's head, to have a big mouth, to talk behind one's back, to negotiate at one's knees
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I learned how to negotiate at my mothers’ ..........
He was caught talking ........ his manager’s back.
She was cautious not to tell her colleague personal information as she was known for her ………. mouth.
The promotion went to his ....... and his attitude to other employees shifted.
I was glad to see the ........ of him when he left the organisation.
It was a ........ to get back on one’s feet when the financial impact was so large.
The case at ........ was to be the focus for the next week.
“Were your ears ……..?” he asked as the manager entered the room.
An eye for an eye was not an approach that was ......... to working within teams.
The upgrade to the office space was going to cost an arm and a .........