drag one's feet
— Verb
– English
~ postpone doing what one should be doing; "He did not want to write the letter and procrastinated for days"
feast one's eyes
— Verb
– English
~ look at with great enjoyment; "She feasted her eyes on the Tuscan landscape"
feather one's nest
— Verb
– English
~ enrich oneself by taking advantage of one's position; "The congressmen feathered his nest through his connection with big business"
flip one's lid
— Verb
– English
~ get very angry and fly into a rage; "The professor combusted when the student didn't know the answer to a very elementary question"; "Spam makes me go ballistic"
cool one's heels
— Verb
– English
~ wait or pass the time aimlessly or futilely; be kept waiting; "She kicked her heels for hours at the gate of the Embassy"
cash in one's chips
— Verb
– English
~ pass from physical life and lose all bodily attributes and functions necessary to sustain life; "She died from cancer"; "The children perished in the fire"; "The patient went peacefully"; "The old guy kicked the bucket at the age of 102"
catch one's breath
— Verb
– English
~ take a short break from one's activities in order to relax
lend oneself
— Verb
– English
~ be applicable to; as to an analysis; "This theory lends itself well to our new data"
kill oneself
— Verb
– English
~ strain oneself more than is healthy
inconvenience oneself
— Verb
– English
~ take the trouble to do something; concern oneself; "He did not trouble to call his mother on her birthday"; "Don't bother, please"
lower oneself
— Verb
– English
~ debase oneself morally, act in an undignified, unworthy, or dishonorable way; "I won't stoop to reading other people's mail"
help oneself
— Verb
– English
~ abstain from doing; always used with a negative; "I can't help myself--I have to smoke"; "She could not help watching the sad spectacle"
find oneself
— Verb
– English
~ accept and make use of one's personality, abilities, and situation; "My son went to Berkeley to find himself"
declare oneself
— Verb
– English
~ ask (someone) to marry you; "he popped the question on Sunday night"; "she proposed marriage to the man she had known for only two months"; "The old bachelor finally declared himself to the young woman"
cross oneself
— Verb
– English
~ make the sign of the cross; in the Catholic religion