Belly Up
Lehman Brother's went belly up during the financial crisis
The rubber tapping company went belly up after the price of rubber tanked
After their competitor spread a rumour that the restaurant was haunted, they went belly up
Definition: To fail, usually a company
Etymology: based on the idea of a dead animal found lying on its back, with its belly (stomach) facing up
Hot and Cold
Alexander kept blowing hot and cold in his relationship with Katy
William kept blowing hot and cold on his decision to move a new country.
After Cathryn kept blowing hot and cold with Jordan, he decided to date someone new.
Definition: to sometimes like or be interested in something or someone and sometimes not, so people are confused about how you really feel
Etymology: This expression comes from Aesop's fable (c. 570 b.c.) about a man eating with a satyr on a winter day. At first the man blew on his hands to warm them and then blew on his soup to cool it. The satyr thereupon renounced the man's friendship because he blew hot and cold out of the same mouth. The expression was repeated by many writers, most often signifying a person who could not be relied on
whole 9 yards
Paris of Troy went the whole 9 yards for Helen, since she was worth it.
The gold prospectors could not promise the whole 9 yards with the new gold mine.
When I get Korean food, i got bul gl gi, gal bee, jap chae, gap chang, the whole 9 yards.
Definition: Everything. All of it.
Etymology: Among the possibilities are the nine yards of material from which tailors made expensive men's suits; the nine cubic yards of concrete that concrete trucks held; the nine yards (or spars) on a three-masted sailing ship; the volume of grave soil; and the length of a World War II aircraft ammunition belt.