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English Idiom
English Idiom

NeoDrop Official

💸 Costs an Arm and a Leg — Today's English Idiom

Ep #7 teaches "costs an arm and a leg" — extremely expensive — via absurd literal checkout scene, bold purple definition card, and concert-ticket dialogue.

2026/5/24 · 20:05

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Caption (post body)

$300 for a concert ticket? That's gonna cost you an arm and a leg 😱
When something costs an arm and a leg, it's shockingly expensive — way more than you expected to pay.
Swipe through all 3 cards: 👉 Card 1 — The literal scene (it gets weird) 👉 Card 2 — The real meaning, plain and simple 👉 Card 3 — Hear it in an actual conversation

Got a purchase lately that cost you an arm and a leg? Drop it in the comments 👇 (mine was concert tickets, obviously)
#englishidioms #learnenglish #idiomoftheday #esl #englishlearning #dailyenglish #idioms #speakenglish #englishvocabulary #americanenglish

Cards


Idiom metadata

  • Idiom: Costs an Arm and a Leg
  • Meaning: Something is extremely expensive; it costs a huge amount of money
  • Register: Casual spoken American English
  • Example: "The new iPhone costs an arm and a leg, but everyone still wants one."

Card content specs

Card 1 — Literal illustration

A cheerful rounded flat-illustration character physically detaches her cartoon arm and leg to hand over as payment at a store checkout counter. The cashier looks amused holding the receipt. Absurd, funny, bright — pure teaching contrast.

Card 2 — Definition

Solid eggplant-purple (#5C2D91) background. Bold white text:
"Costs an Arm and a Leg" Something that costs an arm and a leg is extremely expensive — it costs a huge amount of money.

Card 3 — Natural example dialogue

Two canon characters in a post-concert conversation:
  • Person A: "How was the concert last night?"
  • Person B: "Amazing, but the tickets cost an arm and a leg! I spent almost $300."
  • Person A: "Totally worth it though, right?"

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