DAILY BASIS ENGLISH COURSE

B2 Upper-Intermediate

Idiomatic language in context

After a difficult week, I finally felt like I could see the light at the end of the tunnel.
By the end of this class, students will be able to understand common idiomatic expressions from context, explain their meaning, and use a few of them naturally without sounding forced.
Contents

Introduction

A conversational setting for idiomatic language.
Read the expressions and focus on their meaning in context, not word by word.
At first the project seemed impossible, but now we can see the light at the end of the tunnel.When the meeting became tense, Maria broke the ice with a joke.After months of uncertainty, they were finally back on track.

Idioms are most useful when they appear in a believable context and match the tone of the conversation.

Choose the correct answer.

1. What does 'see the light at the end of the tunnel' suggest?

2. What does 'break the ice' mean here?

3. What does 'back on track' imply?

Score: 0 out of 3

Presentation

Laura: How are things going with that big project now?

Eric: Much better. For a while, it felt as if everything was falling apart, but we are finally back on track.

Laura: That is good to hear. Last time we spoke, you sounded completely overwhelmed.

Eric: I was. Still, once the team started communicating properly, we began to see the light at the end of the tunnel.

Laura: Sometimes that first honest conversation is enough to break the ice and get everyone moving again.

Language Focus

Idiomatic language should be learned as whole expressions in context, not as literal word-by-word translations.

A linguagem idiomática deve ser aprendida como expressões completas em contexto, e não como tradução literal palavra por palavra.

  • break the ice = make a situation feel less tense or awkward
  • back on track = progressing normally again
  • see the light at the end of the tunnel = feel that a difficult period is almost over
  • fall apart = fail or lose control badly

Pronunciation + Form

At B2 level, it is better to use a few idioms accurately than many idioms unnaturally. Context and tone matter more than quantity.

Useful Idioms
break the ice
back on track
fall apart
Context Clues
tense conversation
difficult period
recovered progress
Safer Use
It feels like we are finally back on track.
Her joke helped break the ice.
We can see the light at the end of the tunnel now.

Practice

1. Her comment helped break the
at the start of the meeting.
2. After several delays, the team is finally back on
.
3. The plan almost fell
when two people left the project.
4. We can see the light at the end of the
now.
5. That idiom fits the
well.
Score: 0 out of 5
Choose the best response.

1. Which sentence uses an idiom naturally?

2. Which idiom is useful in a tense social situation?

3. Which advice about idioms is best?

4. Which sentence shows understanding of the idiom?

Score: 0 out of 4

Production

Choose one real situation from your life and describe it using one idiom naturally. Then explain what the idiom means in that context.

  • a difficult project or course
  • an awkward first meeting
  • a period when things nearly went wrong
  • a moment when you started to feel hopeful again
Daily Basis English Course