"Stop it right now!"
When you tell someone, "cut it out!" you're not telling them to get a knife and start dissecting. This is an irritated phrase that you use when someone is doing something annoying, dangerous, or anything in general that they shouldn't do. You are telling them to "cut" that behavior or action out of their act.
In other words, you're telling them, "Stop it right now!"
The expression is actually "to cut a sorry figure." It means to be ashamed of one's person or actions.
The idiom is "cut you short." That means to interrupt someone. Example: "I hate to cut you short, but I am due back at the office."
"You" is not an idiom. It is a pronoun.
to support
This expression means real and simple.
"Turn a deaf ear" is an idiomatic expression meaning to ignore or pay no attention to something.
pleasant and easy....
It means to get married.
It means that is the essence of it. Similar to the expression 'in a nutshell'.
An idiom is a phrase that has a figurative meaning different from its literal meaning, while an idiomatic expression is a specific phrase or sentence structure that is characteristic of a particular language or dialect. Idioms are a type of idiomatic expression, but not all idiomatic expressions are idioms.
a mass where prayers are sung
timid,coward