English idiom: Test the water

Please help me increase my list of idioms as well as its meaning. Can you share me some of your list with its meaning? I’m having trouble in understanding some of it. (Is it testing the waters or testing the water) Please bear on me.

Hi mishy,

Test the water means find out what something is like. Sometimes children while still at school have the chance to do so called work experience where they spend a week or two working under supervision in a particular job so that they have some idea what the job would be like if they did it after they had left school. They are in fact testing the water, finding out what the job is like.

Alan

The basic, literal, concrete meaning of “test the water” is to stick your toe or your hand into a lake or pool to see if the water is comfortable enough to swim in. If the water is a nice temperature, you’ll jump in. If it’s too cold, maybe you won’t. (But I would.:D)

This is the original meaning that leads to the meaning that Alan is talking about. When people “test the water”, it means they try an experience for a little while to see if they want to continue.

Hi,

Yes, that’s true but of course it could be that you are testing the water and actually drinking from a water source to make sure that it tastes all right.

Alan

Right. It could be that too. But when I think of someone testing the water, I usually picture a person sticking a toe in the lake with a slight sense of trepidation.

Hi mishy,

As you are interested in learning more idioms. you might be interested to read some of the material I’ve written for the site under the heading esl lessons:

ESL Lesson: Present Simple
[size=75]http://www.english-test.net/lessons/[/size]

and one I’ve written about colour idioms:

ESL Lesson: Colour Idioms
[size=75]http://www.english-test.net/lessons/8/index.html[/size]

Alan

Hi Alan,
What does mishy mean?
(I couldn’t find it anywhere)
Thanks
Spencer

Hi Spencer,

To be honest, I haven’t a clue. Probably best to ask ‘mishy’.

Alan

Hi Alan,
I just realized that’s the name of mishy, just because it’s not written by capital,I got confused a bit.
It looks like an English word to me. (I thought you called Jamie this way :slight_smile: )
Anyway,thanks for answering my question.
By the way, mishy, do you mean something? :slight_smile:
Spencer

Alan, in England do you often use the way of “havn’t” instead of “don’t have”?
Just because I didn’t hear it too many times, allthought I know it’s proper.
Thanks
Spencer

Hi Spencer,

Haven’t is quite common, I believe.

By the way, I don’t quite follow this comment:

Alan

It looked like an adjective,that’s why.
I thought you answered to HIM. ( he was the last one before you )
Hey, let me explain myself out of this mess and not to look too stupid. :slight_smile:
Thanx
Spencer

Hi Spencer,

As they say, no worries. I see what you meant.

Alan

Or it could also literally mean dipping your elbow in the bath water before bathing the baby…

Hi

Can the idiom (in it’s indirect sense, I mean) refer - also – to the depth of a ‘pond’?

By the way I also heard:
‘for several years he had been in low water’ – and, as it seemed to me, it was used in the meaning that his job was not serious for him, for his actual abilities (becasue of low job responsibities, etc)

Not in the meaning that he had been with no money.
If I understood it right :slight_smile:

Hello, my problem is the irregular verbs. I always fine it difficuilt to use them. I would like to know, if there is any style I could use to get them right. thank!

omario

Hi Omario,

Irregular verbs are those that don’t follow the typical format. Their meaning really has nothing to do with whether they are regular or irregular. I’d like to try to help you but I don’t quite understand what you want to know. Perhaps you could give some examples.

Alan

i want to pass a tofel with good score