"Doin' What Comes Natur'lly" is a song from the 1946 musical Annie Get Your Gun, written by Irving Berlin, about Annie Oakley, the most prominent member of Darke County Ohio, where I grew up.
"Folks are dumb where I come from, They ain't had any learning.
Still they're happy as can be
Doin' what comes naturally (doin' what comes naturally). "
Full Lyrics:
http:/www.stlyrics.com/lyrics/anniegetyourgun/doinwhatcomesnaturlly.htm
YouTube Video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ht42_fWA0bM
It means that it is extremely easy.
It means that something is easily accessible or attainable, as if you could simply reach out and touch it with your fingers, that's how close it is.
It is the opposite of open-handed. It means ungenerous, stingy, unwilling to share. Used of those who have much - and don't seem to enjoy it , especially.
Rolling up might mean to arrive. The image is of an automobile rolling up to the door. It also might mean rolling a cigarette (or anything that you smoke rolled up in a paper). A third meaning would be literally rolling something into a ball or tube, as in rolling up a newspaper into a tube.
"Oh my gosh" would be slang. It is another way of saying "Oh my God," which many people find offensive and blasphemous. People have many phrases that mean the same thing, such as "oh my goodness," "for gosh sake," and "for Pete's sake."
babysitting
traitor, backbiter
Think about this and you can figure it out. An idiom seems to mean one thing but actually means another. Does "with regard" mean just what it seems to? Yes, it does. Therefore, this phrase is not an idiomatic expression.
This is slang - it means your spouse.
It means that it is extremely easy.
it is just an insult
Force someone to do something
UNKNOWN
This mean someone is pretending to have good intentions, but in fact, it's just the opposite.
It can mean that something is difficult or that a person is stubborn.
lt means like extremly angry.
The expression is not idiomatic. It means exactly what it says. To be sent on ( or for) errands means to be out on a shopping trip, or such like, for someone. Mother sent me on errands to the grocery store and the dry cleaners.