I've never heard it. Pickles are sour anyway, so a bad one might be something that's really horrible, but if it is an idiom it is an uncommon one, so I'd not try to use it.
No, "a bad pickle" is not an idiom. It literally refers to a pickle that is not of good quality or taste.
Yes, "in a pickle" is an idiom. It means to be in a difficult or troublesome situation.
The plural of pickle is pickles.
The correct idiom is "add fuel to the fire," which means to worsen a situation or make a conflict stronger by adding more tension or hostility. It is used to describe actions that exacerbate an already difficult or delicate situation.
Yes, "pickle" is a compound word, which is made up of the two words "pick" and "le."
An idiom can also be called a figure of speech or a saying.
Yes, "in a pickle" is an idiom. It means to be in a difficult or troublesome situation.
A food idiom for in serious trouble = in a pickle
Pickle. (I'm serious. There's a saying: "in a pickle.")
It is a slang term for a bad or troublesome situation. The expression is "left (someone) in a pickle" and it means that they have been left in a bad situation, or a situation that will be difficult to resolve. Examples could be: The robbers used his car in the robbery, which left him in a pickle. Santa was left in a pickle when the elves went on strike in November.
A bad joke is an idiom for a poorly-planned or illogical situation.
This is not an idiom. It means exactly what it says. The company that this person keeps is not a good group of people.
I think it's like when you have a bad problem you are caught up in.
The correct idiom is "add fuel to the fire," which means to worsen a situation or make a conflict stronger by adding more tension or hostility. It is used to describe actions that exacerbate an already difficult or delicate situation.
I have never heard that expression before. Do you mean "they left him in a pickle?" If so, that means they left him with a major problem, or they left him in a bad position.
The correct idiom is "a skeleton in the closet."Imagine opening a closet door and seeing a spooky skeleton! This idiom means that something bad is hidden away in someone's past.
The idiom of going to the dogs means that any person or thing has come to a bad end, been ruined, or looks terrible.
A bad penny is an idiom for something which is unpleasant or unwanted, especially something which appears at an undesirable time.