<p>where can I get a list of Idioms? I really want to memorize them so that I can get perfect score on the writing section!</p>
<p>I assume you're talking about prepositions in idioms? If so, this site:<a href="http://www.englisch-hilfen.de/en/exercises/prepositions1.htm%5B/url%5D">http://www.englisch-hilfen.de/en/exercises/prepositions1.htm</a>
has "fill in the blank" for idioms, but just click "show answer"... then maybe you can then copy/paste all the mini quizzes into one list</p>
<p>wow! that was exactly wat i was looking for. thanks</p>
<p>actually, there's only one test...</p>
<p>yeah, I just went back there to see what they had...and there were only 8 of them. Sorry about that. In reparation I offer another website: <a href="http://a4esl.org/q/h/idioms.html%5B/url%5D">http://a4esl.org/q/h/idioms.html</a> </p>
<p>Hope that works out better.</p>
<p>If you have the money/time, you could get:</p>
<p>Mastering Idiomatic English: Prepositional Phrases
Loretta S. Gray (1999)
Chicago: National Textbook Company
Pp. v + 90
ISBN 0-8442-0472-2 (paper)
US $7.95</p>
<p>be as careful with any list of idioms as you would with a list of vocab words or anything else. remember that esl sites are likely to be geared towards british english, which is emphatically not the american english that you'll see (kind of) on the SAT. for example, this page ( <a href="http://a4esl.org/q/h/mc-vm-ex-come.html%5B/url%5D">http://a4esl.org/q/h/mc-vm-ex-come.html</a> ) has the sentence "I wonder why his experiment never came off," which isn't a valid american expression.</p>