In one word: dead.
Pest is not an idiom. It's a word.
An idiom is a phrase that seems to be nonsense unless you know the definition. The word band's is the possessive of the word band, meaning "belonging to the band." It is a word, not an idiom.
An idiom is a phrase whose meaning cannot be guessed from the meaning of the words in it. It makes no sense unless you know the definition. "Feeling" is a word.
No, an idiom is not a slang word. An idiom is a commonly used expression with a figurative meaning that is different from its literal meaning. Slang, on the other hand, refers to informal words and phrases that are specific to a particular group or generation.
Dead to the world means sleeping soundly. One example of a sentence with the idiom dead to the word is: After working a double shift, Sarah fell asleep and was dead to the world.
No, a synonym is a word that means the same as another word. An idiom is a phrase that does not have a literal meaning. Ex, mountains out of mole hills.
No, a riddle is a word puzzle. An idiom is a phrase whose meaning cannot be discovered by context.
That is not an idiom. When you see the word LIKE, you're looking at a simile.
An "Arabism" is an idiom, a word or phrase having a particular meaning or inference in Arabic.
surprise, idea, shock
Promising is not an idiom -- it is a word. Idioms are phrases.
"Word for word" means copied exactly. If you repeat something word for word, you repeat everything perfectly.