

This Grade 6 worksheet helps students understand and apply food-related idioms through engaging exercises like matching idioms with their meanings, completing sentences with the correct idiom, and sentence rewriting. Students will improve their ability to use figurative language in both spoken and written English.
Food-related idioms make language more creative and meaningful. For Grade 6 learners, this topic is important because:
1. They help students use metaphors to express ideas vividly.
2. Understanding idioms enhances both comprehension and communication skills.
3. Food-related idioms are commonly used in daily conversations, enhancing fluency.
4. Mastery of idioms deepens students' understanding of figurative language.
This worksheet includes five exercises designed to build fluency with food-related idioms:
Exercise 1 – Match the Idioms
Students match idioms like "piece of cake" and "sell like hot cakes" with their correct meanings, such as "very easy" and "quickly sell."
Exercise 2 – True/False Statements
Learners determine whether the sentences about food-related idioms are true or false based on their meanings.
Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks
Students fill in sentences with the correct food-related idiom to reinforce learning.
Exercise 4 – Multiple Choice Questions
Students choose the correct idiom to complete each sentence, helping them apply idioms in context.
Exercise 5 – Sentence Rewriting
Students rewrite sentences with the correct idioms, improving their understanding and usage of food-related idioms.
Exercise 1 – Match the Idioms
1. Cry over spilled milk – Regret past
2. Bread and butter – Main income
3. In a pickle – In trouble
4. Piece of cake – Very easy
5. Big cheese – Important person
6. Hot potato – Controversy
7. Cool as a cucumber – Calm
8. Sell like hot cakes – Quickly sell
9. Egg on face – Embarrassed
10. Butter up – Flatter
Exercise 2 – True/False Statements
1. True
2. False
3. True
4. False
5. True
6. False
7. True
8. False
9. True
10. False
Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks
1. the icing on the cake
2. a hard nut to crack
3. a couch potato
4. spilled the beans
5. full of beans
6. cry over spilled milk
7. take it with a grain of salt
8. brings home the bacon
9. a piece of cake
10. hot potato
Exercise 4 – Multiple Choice Questions
1. a) butter someone up
2. b) a bitter pill to swallow
3. c) a tough cookie
4. d) half baked
5. a) jam- packed
6. a) went bananas
7. b) sweet deal
8. b) top banana
9. c) cold turkey
10. d) spilled the tea
Exercise 5 – Sentence Rewriting
1. The final bonus made the achievement even better; it was a cherry on the top.
2. The problem was very difficult to solve; it was a hard nut to crack.
3. He found it hard to trust the information; it sounded fishy.
4. The snacks became extremely popular and sold very fast; they sold like hot cakes.
5. She was very nervous before the competition; she felt butterflies in her stomach.
6. He suddenly stopped eating junk food without any preparation; he went cold turkey
7. The issue was too sensitive to discuss openly; it was off.
8. He tried to flatter the teacher too much; he tried to butter her up.
9. The children were very energetic and active; they were full of energy.
10. She is involved in many different activities at the same time; she has too many irons in the fire.
Help your child master food-related idioms with this fun worksheet.
Food-related idioms are expressions that use food to convey deeper meanings, helping students enrich their language skills.
Students can recognize food-related idioms by looking for phrases where the meaning is not literal but tied to everyday experiences.
Understanding these idioms improves comprehension, speaking skills, and helps students express emotions and ideas creatively.