What Does “Like Oil and Water” Mean?
“Like Oil and Water” is a common English idiom. It means two people or things that don't mix or get along. For example: Those two are like oil and water. In this one-minute lesson you hear the idiom used in a short, natural conversation and shadow it out loud — so you understand it, remember it, and can say it with the right rhythm and stress.
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Understanding “Like Oil and Water”
Meaning: “Like Oil and Water” means two people or things that don't mix or get along.
Example in use: Those two are like oil and water.
Idioms like this are common in casual everyday English, TV, and movies — shadowing them helps you sound natural.
Say the idiom as one smooth phrase with its natural stress, not word by word with equal emphasis.
Learning goals
- Understand what “Like Oil and Water” means.
- Use “Like Oil and Water” correctly in a sentence.
- Say the idiom with natural stress and rhythm.
- Recognize the idiom instantly when you hear it in conversation or film.
About this practice
“English in a Minute” explains one common idiom — “Like Oil and Water” — in about a minute using a short, natural conversation.
At B2 level it is a quick, focused idiom you can learn and shadow in a single sitting.
Practice tips
- 1Shadow the idiom as one chunk, not word by word.
- 2Use “Like Oil and Water” in your own sentence today to lock it in.
- 3Repeat the short clip a few times until the idiom feels automatic.
Frequently asked questions
What does “Like Oil and Water” mean?
“Like Oil and Water” means two people or things that don't mix or get along. For example: Those two are like oil and water.
Is “Like Oil and Water” formal or informal?
It's an informal, conversational idiom — common in everyday speech, TV, and film rather than formal writing.
How does shadowing help with idioms?
Idioms have a fixed rhythm. Shadowing trains you to say the whole phrase smoothly and to recognize it instantly when you hear it.
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