Found 1,631 phrases starting with C: Page #7

Skip to:CCACBCC - CECF - CHCI - CKCL - CNCO - CQCR - CTCU - CWCX - CZ


catch someone with one's hand in the cookie jarTo catch someone taking something that he or she is not entitled to.Rate it:
catch someone's driftIf you catch someone's drift (or get someone's drift) it means you understand what they mean; this phrase is used especially when you want to get an idea across to someone but you don't want to exactly speak the words you mean or if you think the listener may be confused about what you meanRate it:
catch someone's eyeTo capture someone's attention.Rate it:
catch the eyeTo attract the attentionRate it:
catch the sunTo reflect light from the sun.Rate it:
catch the sunTo become sunburned.Rate it:
catch upget level withRate it:
catch upTo get news.Rate it:
catch upTo compensate for or make up a deficiency.Rate it:
catch upTo be reaching something that had been ahead.Rate it:
catch upTo provide with news.Rate it:
catch upTo entangle.Rate it:
catch upTo pick up suddenly.Rate it:
catch you laterAn informal farewellRate it:
Catch You LaterTo say farewell to someone for a short time-period or just a simple good byeRate it:
catch you on the flip sideGoodbye, farewell.Rate it:
Catch-22A difficult situation from which there is no escape because it involves mutually conflicting or dependent conditions.Rate it:
catch-as-catch-canIntermittent; only when possible or when the opportunity presents itself.Rate it:
catch-as-catch-canA. 1681, John Fryer, Richard Chiswell, Robert Roberts, Robert White, A New Account of East-India and Persia, in Eight Letters, Being Nine Years Travels, Begun 1672 and Finished 1681.Rate it:
Catholic twinssiblings born within twelve months of each other.Rate it:
Catholic twinsUsed other than as an idiom: see Catholic, twin.Rate it:
catmeatSomeone who has been badly beaten.Rate it:
catmeatCatfood consisting of meat.Rate it:
catmeatMeat from a cat.Rate it:
cats cradlegame using stringRate it:
cats have nine livesIt looked as though the car ran over the cat, yet the cat walked away as if nothing happened. Cats have nine lives.Rate it:
cattle callAn audition which is open to the public and thus draws a large number of applicants, many of whom are inexperienced.Rate it:
caucus raceThe competitive process in which a political party selects their candidate, esp. presidential; a primary election via caucus.Rate it:
caucus raceA political competition; the game of campaigning and one-upmanship to get votes and be elected.Rate it:
caught between the devil and the deep blue seaHaving a choice between two alternatives, both undesirable.Rate it:
caught in the actTo be found doing something that you weren't supposed to be doing, while you're doing it.Rate it:
caught in the disabling webs of a dilemmacaught in a dilemmaRate it:
caught on the hopTo be in a situation of change, especially from a known to an unknown stateRate it:
caught on the hopTo be in an unprepared situationRate it:
caught red-handedA thief who is caught in the act is described as caught red-handed.Rate it:
caught with one's hand in the cookie jarObserved or apprehended while committing a theft, especially while embezzling money.Rate it:
caught with one's pants downCaught off guard, unprepared, or in an embarrassing situation.Rate it:
caughten on itcatches in throatRate it:
cause a stirTo cause controversy, or raise a disturbance.Rate it:
caution - slippery when wetWarning, often in the form of a sign, that people should pay attention when walking on a wet and slippery ground not to fall down and get injured.Rate it:
cave inThe location where something has caved in.Rate it:
cave inThe act of relenting.Rate it:
cave incollapseRate it:
cave inThe act of something collapsing or caving in.Rate it:
caveat emptorA provision of Roman law which gave the seller of a house the legal right to keep quiet about any defects of the house.Rate it:
caveat emptorUsed as a warning to anyone buying something that there might be unforeseen problems or faults with what is bought.Rate it:
caveat lectorReader beware.Rate it:
caviar to the generalSomething of quality unbefitting those who possess it.Rate it:
CAVOKAcronym of Ceiling and visibility OK., sometimes alternatively interpreted as "Clouds and Visibility OK", a weather status report for pilots when visibility is at least 10 kilometres, there are no clouds below 5000 feet or minimum sector altitude, and there is no current or forecast significant weather such as precipitation.Rate it:
CBAInitialism of collective bargaining agreement.Rate it:

We need you!

Help us build the largest human-edited phrases collection on the web!

Quiz

Are you a phrases master?

»
She's a ________ above the rest.
A nick
B cut
C gash
D snip