an arm and a leg

Status
Not open for further replies.

Cunning Fox

Junior Member
Joined
Oct 4, 2021
Member Type
Interested in Language
Native Language
Russian
Home Country
Russian Federation
Current Location
Russian Federation
Hi,

I'd like to know whether the idiom "an arm and a leg" is still used nowadays (to me it sounds chiefly British and like something straight from the 18th century). I've always used "cost a fortune" with the same meaning. :-D

My own Example: This English textbook cost me an arm and a leg! I swear to god, it'd better be the greatest English grammar book ever existed on the planet or I'm done with this publisher.

Thank you in advance.

With kind regards,
Cunning Fox
 
It is pretty common in my homeland, Canada. I don't think of it as British.
 
Thank you. Am I right to assume that if it's common in Canada, it's also understandable in the US?
 
Definitely.
 
It's much more popular now than it was a hundred years ago: Ngrams
 
PS Bookmark this site to look at phrases over time. You can zero in on American English and separate phrases you want to compare with a comma.

https://books.google.com/ngrams
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top