The idiom 'in the wheelhouse' is an old Baseball saying that dates back to the early 1950's. The term originally referred being in someone's pitch area.
The idiom "in my/your/his wheelhouse" appears to have originated in baseball, as far back as the 1950s, perhaps before that. It's used to describe a pitch that comes across the plate in the batter's "sweet spot," a place where he can reliably make solid contact with the ball. The figurative origin of the term is less easy to pin down. The metaphor may have been meant to suggest rotational force, as with a railroad wheelhouse (also called a roundhouse), a platform used to spin a train engine or car for the purpose of transferring it to a different track. Or it may may have come from the nautical meaning of wheelhouse (aka pilothouse), suggesting a place where one has complete control, as on a ship.
Palestinian and Persian
food
Meaning he will help you out.
It is just an idiom and has no history.
The idiom "in my/your/his wheelhouse" appears to have originated in baseball, as far back as the 1950s, perhaps before that. It's used to describe a pitch that comes across the plate in the batter's "sweet spot," a place where he can reliably make solid contact with the ball. The figurative origin of the term is less easy to pin down. The metaphor may have been meant to suggest rotational force, as with a railroad wheelhouse (also called a roundhouse), a platform used to spin a train engine or car for the purpose of transferring it to a different track. Or it may may have come from the nautical meaning of wheelhouse (aka pilothouse), suggesting a place where one has complete control, as on a ship.
To be exposed
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Origin "up a storm"
No
That's not an idiom - it means exactly what it says - there are twelve months in a year.
Paul Wheelhouse was born in 1970.
Ben Wheelhouse died in 1985.
It is a slang term from the 1930's, origin not known
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affrica (iraq
To hope for the best