| Idiom | Meaning | Example | 
| drum up | 
create interest in, recruit, find some customers
 | 
We have a million widgets to sell. Let's drum up some customers.
 | 
| dry out | 
stop using alcohol, on the wagon
 | 
She's drying out at a treatment centre. It's a four-week program.
 | 
| dry run | 
complete rehearsal, walk through
 | 
Let's do a dry run of our play so I can add the background music.
 | 
| dry up | 
stop talking, be quiet
 | 
I wish he'd dry up. He talks too much.
 | 
| dubs | 
everyone pays for his own food; Dutch treat
 | 
If we go to the cafe, it's dubs. We each pay for our own treat.
 | 
| duck out | 
leave, run away, desert, skip out, jam
 | 
"Where did you go?" "I ducked out when the gang walked in."
 | 
| duck soup | 
easy, quick, a piece of cake
 | 
If you know how to move the decimal point, calculating a percentage
is easy - it's duck soup!
 | 
| duck's guts | 
(See it's the duck's guts)
 | 
 | 
| ducks in a row (ducks in order) | 
organized, planned; each person knows his job
 | 
I have to get my ducks in a row before the sale on Tuesday.
 | 
| ducky | 
great, fine, lovely
 | 
"Somebody left the gate open and the horses are gone!"
"That's ducky, just ducky!"
 |