Phrase of the Day (hemmed and hawed (or) ummed and ahhed)-18FEB21

Phrase of the Day (hemmed and hawed (or) ummed and ahhed)-18FEB21

Today’s “Phrase of the Day” is hemmed and hawed (or) ummed and ahhed and its meaning is “be unable to decide what to do (or) take a long time to decide on something; be indecisive; be hesitant, be uncertain”.

Example Sentence: Yet apart from the furlough policy, The Chancellor of the Exchequer (The UK Finance minister) Rishi Sunak is even more of a normalist (believer in normality) than his boss. He is the cabinet’s most powerful agitator against lockdowns. His “eat out to help out” scheme is the arch-normalist (chief-normalist) policy: a costly attempt to make believe that all is dandy (excellent) – just weeks before another lockdown. And he has hemmed and hawed, ummed and ahhed over continuing his furlough scheme.

Phrase of the Day (hemmed and hawed (or) ummed and ahhed)-18FEB21

This phrase is present in The Guardian article The budget is a dangerous moment for an ambitious chancellor and click here to read it.

Courtesy: The Guardian

“Phrasal Verbs” We Learnt Last Week

“Idioms & Phrases” We Learnt Last Week

“Important Definitions” We Learnt Last Week

Recent Word Lists For The Hindu Editorial Articles

Recent Advanced Word Lists For The Hindu Lead Articles

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*