<p>Hii guys. I've been practicing writing for a while now. Most of the time, I miss idiom questions... rawr >.< . I happened to come across a site that contained lists of idioms. However, I'm not sure if it is complete enough for the SAT. Therefore, I was wondering if you guys could check this site out and tell me how good it is. I would also like to know how to study them o.o;;. Sounds like a weird question I know ^__^;;.. but I can't get to the bookstore before saturday. =( Sorry for the hassle, but it would really mean a lot to me if someone could help me. Thanks!
<3 Z</p>
<p>You know, giving us the link to the site would help a lot :P</p>
<p>gahh!! Sorrry =(</p>
<p>I found the flashcard one just about 2 minutes ago on google.<br>
Btw, you're fast XD</p>
<p>It's 'cause I'm so cool! lol just kidding... Anyways those sites look pretty complete, especially if you use them together.</p>
<p>Sorry for my stupidity but... how exactly do I study these? XDD</p>
<p>I understand that if it says "consist of", I should put a sentence that says , "the bands consists of...." but aren't there instances that can use other words after consist? Sorry if that doens't make any sense >.<;;</p>
<p>Does anyone recommend any prep books as well?. My mom is going to take me to the bookstore and i'm just going to write down their idiom list ^___^.</p>
<p>well as far as i know you always use "consist of", i can't think of any occasion that's an exception to this rule, but i could be wrong :P</p>
<p>the lists look pretty complete to me. most of them you should already know just cuz they sound rite. cb always tests you on the tricky ones, like "aspire to" instead of "aspire for". just read them aloud to yourself a few times, and keep your fingers crossed that the ones you don't know won't show up on the test. lol</p>
<p>gl</p>
<p>thanks guys. I definitely have my finger's crossed.</p>