026fish
a big fish
If you refer to someone as a big fish, you mean that they are important or powerful.
In the Seventies three MPs became embroiled in a scandal surrounding the corrupt activities of a Pontefract architect called John Poulson. Two of them were nonentities, the third was a very big fish indeed.
The four who were arrested here last September were described as really big fish by the U.S. Drug Enforcement agents here, and they are wanted for extradition to the United .
a big fish in a small pond
a big frog in a small pond
If you refer to someone as a big fish in a small pond, you mean that they are one of the most important and influential people in a small organization or social group. You often use this expression to suggest that they would be less important or interesting if they were part of a larger organization or group. This expression is very variable. In American English, you can also talk about a big frog in a small pond, with the same meaning.
In Rhodesia I was a big fish in a small pond. But here there'd be many lean years before I built up a reputation.
As a large fish in a small pond, Smith found it easy to dominate fashion photography in Australia.
Being a big fish in a tiny, stagnant pool clearly gives controversial columnists ideas way above their station.
You can refer to someone as a small fish in a big pond if they are not very important or influential because they are part of a much larger organization or social group.
I was used to being a big fish in a small pond. Now I'm the smallest fish in a very big pond. But that has its own advantages because it stretches you as a designer to try to achieve more.
a cold fish
If you refer to someone as a cold fish, you mean that they seem unemotional, and this makes them appear unfriendly or unsympathetic.
Since is generally seen as a cold fish, it is all the more impressive when he does show his feelings.
He didn't really show much emotion -- he is a bit of a cold fish.
drink like a fish
If you say that someone drinks like a fish, you mean that they regularly drink a lot of alcohol.
When I was younger I could drink like a fish and eat like a pig.
The father was not too bad but the mother drank like a fish.
a fish out of water
If you feel like a fish out of water, you feel awkward or ill at ease because you are in an unfamiliar situation or surroundings.
I think he thought of himself as a country gentleman and was like a fish out of water in Birmingham.
It's not as if I had any obvious trauma in my life; I just felt like a fish out of water.
You can use fish-out-of-water before a noun, to describe a situation where someone feels awkward or uncomfortable.
The fish-out-of-water feeling continued when she went to study in Cambridge, having already spent two years working in Africa.
have other fish to fry
have bigger fish to fry
If you say that someone is not interested in something because they have other fish to fry or have bigger fish to fry, you mean that they are not interested because they have more important, interesting, or profitable things to do.
I didn't pursue it in detail because I'm afraid I had other fish to fry at the time.
Although she nearly lost her temper with Baker, Linda Robinson tried to avoid wasting time on bureaucratic squabbling. She had bigger fish to fry.
This phrase is often varied. For example, if someone has their own fish to fry, they are not interested in doing something because they have business of their own to attend to.
Tony comes and goes. got his own fish to fry, as they say.
like shooting fish in a barrel
If you say that a battle or contest is like shooting fish in a barrel, you mean that one side is so much stronger than the other that the weaker side has no chance at all of winning.
I heard one case where some of the had come out and they were saying like shooting fish in a barrel.
While Taylor insists that he is not treating this game as a one-off opportunity to shoot fish in a barrel, he is well aware of the necessity for his players to take a high proportion of the chances that are bound to arise.
neither fish nor fowl
If you say that something or someone is neither fish nor fowl, you mean that they are difficult to identify, classify, or understand, because they seem partly one thing and partly another. People occasionally replace `fish' with `flesh'.
Brunel's vessel was neither fish nor fowl: a passenger liner too ugly and dirty to offer much beyond novelty value.
By the mid-1980s, Canada had a constitution that was neither fish nor fowl in terms of political philosophy.
He thought of that young man Corsari, neither flesh nor fowl, who had made a friend of both girls.
there are plenty more fish in the sea
there are other fish in the sea
If your romance or love affair has ended and someone says to you `there are plenty more fish in the sea' or `there are other fish in the sea', they are trying to comfort you by pointing out that there are still many other people who you might have a successful relationship with in the future.
If your daughter is upset because her boyfriend left her, declaring cheerfully `There are other fish in the sea' won't help.
Never mind, he says, there are plenty more fish in the sea.
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