350 Idioms & Phrases for Kids

Idioms & Phrases for Kids — 350 Idioms with Hindi Meanings | English1to5.com
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350 Idioms & Phrases for Kids — with Hindi Meanings & Examples

The most fun way to learn English expressions! 350 idioms in 7 sections — each with Hindi meaning, origin story, literal vs actual comparison, example sentences, mini dialogues, and interactive games!

📅 Updated: June 2, 2026 · 35 pages · 350 idioms · 7 sections

350
Idioms
35
Pages
7
Sections
350
Hindi Meanings
280
Quiz Qs

🐾 Where Should You Start?

New to idioms? Start with Animal Idioms — they’re visual, fun, and easy to remember! Ready for a challenge? Try the Fun & Challenge section for the Mega Idiom Quiz!

Start with Animal Idioms →

✨ What Makes These Idiom Pages Special?

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Literal vs Actual

See what the idiom literally means vs what it actually means — hilarious and unforgettable!

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Hindi Meanings

Every idiom has its Hindi translation — perfect for Indian kids learning English!

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Origin Stories

Fascinating stories behind each idiom — why do we say “raining cats and dogs”?

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Mini Dialogues

See each idiom used in a real conversation between Indian kids!

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Common Mistakes

Learn what NOT to say — avoid errors Indian students commonly make!

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Write Your Own

Practice writing your own sentences using each idiom!

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3 Interactive Games

Match meanings, fill-in-blanks with hints, and take the quiz!

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Pronunciation Guide

Know which words to stress: “Let the CAT out of the BAG”

📊 Difficulty Guide

⭐ Beginner (Grade 2-3)

Start here: Animal Idioms (1-5) and Body Part Idioms (6-10). Visual, common, and easy to understand. “Let the cat out of the bag,” “keep your eyes open.”

⭐⭐ Intermediate (Grade 3-4)

Level up: Food & Nature (11-15), School & Everyday (16-20). More abstract meanings. “Piece of cake,” “once in a blue moon.”

⭐⭐⭐ Advanced (Grade 4-5)

Challenge: Feelings (21-25), Action & Advice (26-30), Fun & Challenge (31-35). Complex expressions and proverbs. “Bite off more than you can chew.”

👨‍👩‍👧 Parent Guide — How to Teach Idioms at Home

  1. Start Visual: Begin with Animal Idioms — kids love animals, and these idioms are easy to picture (“raining cats and dogs”).
  2. Use Literal vs Actual: Show the funny literal meaning, then the real meaning. Kids remember through laughter!
  3. Daily Practice: Introduce 2-3 idioms per day. Use them in real conversation: “Hurry up — time flies!”
  4. Play Idiom Charades: Act out the literal meaning — family guesses the idiom. Hilarious and educational!
  5. Make Flashcards: Idiom on front, meaning + Hindi + example on back. Review during car rides.
  6. Spot Idioms: While reading or watching TV, pause when you hear an idiom: “Did you catch that?”
  7. Weekly Challenge: Each family member uses 3 new idioms in conversation. Award stars ⭐ for correct usage!
  8. Avoid Mistakes: Each page shows common errors. Review these to prevent bad habits forming.

People Also Ask

What are the easiest idioms for kids to learn?

Animal idioms are easiest: “raining cats and dogs” (heavy rain), “let the cat out of the bag” (reveal a secret), “when pigs fly” (never). They’re visual and fun to picture!

How many idioms should a child learn per week?

5-10 idioms per week is ideal. Quality over quantity — make sure kids can use each idiom in a sentence before moving on. Our pages teach 10 per page with full practice.

Do Indian kids need to learn idioms?

Yes! Idioms appear in CBSE/ICSE exams, storybooks, movies, and daily English conversation. Understanding idioms is the difference between “knowing English” and “understanding English.”

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What are idioms?

Idioms are phrases where words together mean something different from each word alone. For example, ‘raining cats and dogs’ means very heavy rain, not animals falling from the sky!

How many idioms are covered?

350 idioms across 35 pages, organized in 7 sections: Animal, Body Part, Food & Nature, School, Feelings, Action, and Fun & Challenge.

Are Hindi meanings available?

Yes! Every idiom includes its Hindi meaning (हिंदी अर्थ), making it easy for Indian kids to understand and remember.

What grade level are these for?

Grades 2-5 (ages 7-11). Animal and Body Part idioms are easier (Grade 2-3), while Action and Proverbs suit Grade 4-5.

What makes these pages special?

Each idiom has 9 components: meaning, Hindi translation, visual emoji, literal vs actual comparison, pronunciation guide, origin story, 2 examples, dialogue, and common mistakes.

How to teach idioms to kids?

Start with visual Animal Idioms. Use the ‘Literal vs Actual’ feature — it’s hilarious and memorable! Practice with dialogues and games. Use 2-3 new idioms per week.

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