D
Idioms beginning with "D"
Part of speech, explanation, example sentences, pronunciation
No categories: 
 
		Contents of D:
			
			[dead ahead]  {adv.},  {informal}
Exactly in front; before. 
The school is dead ahead about two miles from here.
Father was driving in a fog, and suddenly he saw another car dead ahead of him.
[dead and buried]  {adj. phr.}
Gone forever. 
Slavery is dead and buried in twentieth-century America.
[dead as a doornail]  {adj. phr.}
Completely dead without the slightest hope of resuscitation. 
This battery is dead as a doornail; no wonder your car won't start.
[dead center]  {n.}
The exact middle. 
The treasure was buried in the dead center of the island.
Often used like an adverb. 
The arrow hit the circle dead center.
[dead duck]  {n.},  {slang}
A person or thing in a hopeless situation or condition; one to whom something bad is sure to happen. 
When the pianist broke her arm, she was a dead duck.
[dead letter]  {n. phr.}
An undeliverable letter that ends up in a special office holding such letters. 
There is a dead letter office in most major cities.
[dead loss]  {n. phr.}
A total waste; a complete loss. 
Our investment in Jack's company turned out to be a dead loss.
[dead on one's feet]  {adv. phr.},  {informal}
Very tired but still standing or walking; too tired to do more; exhausted. 
Jimmy never leaves a job unfinished. He continues to work even when he's dead on his feet.
* /After the soldiers march all  […]
[dead pedal]  {n.},  {slang},  {citizen's band radio jargon}
A slow moving vehicle. 
Better pass that eighteen wheeler, Jack; it's a dead pedal.
