diff --git a/curriculum/challenges/english/21-a2-english-for-developers/learn-how-to-discuss-your-morning-or-evening-routine/6556be93f9fcb88ac9e88b0d.md b/curriculum/challenges/english/21-a2-english-for-developers/learn-how-to-discuss-your-morning-or-evening-routine/6556be93f9fcb88ac9e88b0d.md index 100111dd75d..de0735def5e 100644 --- a/curriculum/challenges/english/21-a2-english-for-developers/learn-how-to-discuss-your-morning-or-evening-routine/6556be93f9fcb88ac9e88b0d.md +++ b/curriculum/challenges/english/21-a2-english-for-developers/learn-how-to-discuss-your-morning-or-evening-routine/6556be93f9fcb88ac9e88b0d.md @@ -13,12 +13,12 @@ Idiomatic expressions are phrases where the words together have a different mean `A ton of energy` is an idiomatic expression meaning having a lot of energy, similar to saying `loads of energy`. -Another expression would be `I slept like a rock,` which means sleeping very deeply. Here are some more examples of Idiomatic Expressions: +Another expression would be `I slept like a rock,` which means sleeping very deeply. Here are some more examples of idiomatic expressions: -`She's feeling blue today.` (feeling sad) -`This math problem is a piece of cake.` (very easy) -`He's in hot water now.` (in trouble) -`They see eye to eye.` (agree with each other) +* `She's feeling blue today.` (feeling sad) +* `This math problem is a piece of cake.` (very easy) +* `He's in hot water now.` (in trouble) +* `They see eye to eye.` (agree with each other) # --fillInTheBlank--