Confusing English Idioms You Must Learn 😵💫 #Shorts #LearnEnglish #Idioms #SpokenEnglish #ashortaday
Mar 31, 2026•Channel
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Video Overview
Video Details
Published3 months ago
Duration0:47
Video IDJtJiT21ACiM
Languageen
CategoryEducation
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeYouTube Short
Performance Metrics
Views12.1K
Likes266
Comments10
Engagement Rate2.29%
Likes per 100 views2.21
Comments per 1K views0.83
Video Tags
Description
Me trying to make plans with my friend in English be like......
Okay let me explain this to you like you're 10 years old because honestly, even adults get confused by these three little words
I'M DOWN Does NOT mean you fell on the floor. Does NOT mean you're physically low. It means "Yes! I'm in! Let's do it!" OR it means you're feeling sad, tired, low mood. Context is EVERYTHING babes.
I'M UP FOR IT ↑ Does NOT mean you're standing up. Does NOT mean you're on a rooftop somewhere. It means "I'm interested! I'm keen! Count me in!" Same vibe as I'm down just slightly more enthusiastic energy
I'M IN Does NOT mean you're physically inside a room, a car, or a building. It simply means "I agree. I'm participating. Let's go." Short. Simple. Powerful.
"Party tonight?" - I'm down /"I'm feeling down" = I'm sad, not Here's your cheat sheet I'm up for it / I'm in = YES standing in a hole These are called Informal Idioms English's sneaky little tricks
PRO TIP
When in doubt - listen to the TONE of voice, not just the words. English is 40% words and 60% vibes. Truly.
And if you're still confused - don't worry. Even geometry can't save you here.