Why Idioms Matter in IELTS Speaking?
With regular practice, Idioms can make your speech more fluent, engaging, and confident while helping you achieve a higher band score. IELTS Speaking is scored on four criteria: Fluency and Coherence, Lexical Resource, Grammatical Range and Accuracy, and Pronunciation. Idioms is the use of Lexical Resource. Idioms are proof of real fluency — not memorized fluency.
Top 5 IELTS Idioms That Instantly Boost Your Speaking Score
1. Once in a blue moon - very rarely
Example: I watch movies in the cinema once in a blue moon.
2. Cost an arm and a leg - expensive
Example: Traveling to France can cost me an arm and a leg.
3. The cutting edge - most advance
Example: I bought a new laptop with a cutting-edge microprocessor for my studies and work.
4. Call it a day - Stop working
Example: Let's call it a day and continue tomorrow.
5. Under the weather - feeling sick
Example: The only time I skip my routine is when I'm under the weather or have a busy schedule.
How to Practice These Idioms Effectively
- Speak them out loud in full sentences — don't just memorize the definition.
- Connect each idiom to a personal example from your own life so it comes out naturally under pressure.
- Use 5 to 10 words per total question. Idiom overload sounds unnatural and rehearsed.
- Record yourself answering common Part 1 and Part 2 questions using these idioms, then listen back for fluency.
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