It's not really an idiom - "to account" is to tally up, add together, or count everything, so if you take something into account, you're adding the information into the whole.
jump a lots
To talk fast.
to want to do something; a wanting to entertain oneself
Clockwork isn't an idiom that I'm aware of. The work means something that is mechanical, driven by old-fashioned gears and wheels. It can also mean something that runs as smoothly as if mechanical, or something repetitive and mechanical-seeming.
An asterisk is not an idiom. It is a punctuation mark. It looks like a little star *
It is a Caribbean idiom meaning to be mislead and conned into a silly situation.
This is not an idiom. It actually means to stretch your arms and legs. To take a break.
The idiom, "Take his temperature" is an idiom because his temperature is not really being taken away from him, it is actually being measured. In fact, the temperature of his body is being measured - that is your answer.
it means to take a chance or risk
It's not an idiom because it means exactly what it seems to mean. To take offence at something means to be offended or insulted by the something, so "did not take offence" means the opposite.
To take an unhappy decision or result and deal with it resolutely
To snowball means to get increasingly worse. "I got in late, my boss is mad, I lost an account and then my day began to snowball.
Somebody is to pay, or be responsible, for it
"Take you out in a box" is an idiom for "murder" in that you will be carried away in a coffin.
Go ahead and so something that will grab the attention of everyone in the room.
It is not an idiom, it means your nose is itching.
It's not really an idiom. It means "what are you thinking about."