Unit 1 In the Morning
Wake up to awake, to arise from sleep
Also: get up
GRAMMAR/USAGE NOTES: These idioms can be used with or without an object. With an object, the idioms are separable. Get up literally means “ to get out of the bed”, which may happen some time after waking up.
▪ Ginger usually gets up before her parents, but this morning they had to wake her up.
▪ Sometimes after I wake up, I lie in bed for a while before I finally get up.
Crack of dawn the moment when sunlight is first seen in the mornig sky
▪ During the busy harvest season, farmers get up at the crack of dawn and don’t stop working until dusk.
Go off to sound, to ring
USAGE NOTE: The subject is usually alarm or buzzer.
▪ When the alarm goes off in the morning, I jump out of bed immediately.
▪ Jack was late to work because he didn’t hear the buzzer go off.
Not sleep a wink to get no sleep (or very little sleep) during the night
USAGE NOTE: The negative term hardly can substitute for not.
▪ The Wilsons couldn’t sleep a wink the first night they spent in their new house.
▪ The children were so excited about opening presents on Christmas Day that they hardly slept a wink on Christmas Eve.
Sleep like a log to sleep very well
Also: sleep like a baby
▪ I didn’t wake up once las night. I must have slept like a log.
▪ Maria can sleep like a baby in almost any place, including airplanes and cars.
Take a shower to shower
Related idiom: take a bath(to bathe)
▪ After easy exercise I take a shower, but after serious exercise I take a bath to relax my muscles.
Get ready to prepare oneself by getting dressed, eating breakfast, and so on
▪ It takes Linda about an hour to get ready for work if she hurries.
▪ The first thing I do to get ready in the morning is to shave.
Get someone going to stimulate into action
GRAMMAR/USAGE NOTES: This idiom is used when someone is slow to act in the morning. A reflexive pronoun can also be used.
▪ There’s nothing like a good cup of coffee to get me going in the morning.
▪ Charlie likes to jog every morning to get himself going.
Start the day off (right) to begin the day with something good
▪ I usually start the day off by having some tea and reading the newspaper.
▪ Some people like to exercise to start the day off right.
Sleep in to stay in bed late in the morning
▪ On the weekends, many people like to sleep in.
▪ Josh chose to sleep in after staying up late the night before.
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