No because you can figure out the meaning if you think about it. A PhD degree means you know a lot about a subject, so if you claim you're a "doctor of love," you're claiming you have earned a degree by knowing a lot about love.
It's not an idiom because you can figure out the meaning by thinking. A PhD is a college degree meaning you have studied a subject intensively and know a lot about it. If you are a doctor of love, you know a lot about love.
To doctor the accounts is to falsify the accounts.
"Head over heels in love" would be one idiom.
yes it does not compare anything so it is an idiom
love is irrational and stupid ;)
An idiom is a phrase that doesn't make sense until you know the definition. Can you actually fall into a hole called "love"? No, so this is an idiom.
What the idiom is saying is that there's nobody that ugly to find love.
This is not an idiom. Some people call their loved one by a pet name like "honey" or "darling" or "sweetie."
There is no way to say that. It is an English idiom.
One idiom describes being in love as being "head over heels."
in the first book twilight : So the lion fell in love with the lambThat is not an idiom -- it is a metaphor. An idiom is a phrase that makes no sense when you read it literally. That phrase merely compares Edward to a lion and Bella to a lamb.
it means an idiom/per