Yes it is an idiom.. "break a leg" means "good luck".... if you want to know just watch the movie of high school musical part one... :P
Not really. It's more of a slang used in the theater -- it really means the opposite, which is "good luck."
get a leg up on
Oh yes, that is an idiom. There are no transactions in which someone literally gives one of his or her arms and legs as payment.
It's not an idiom. To break camp means to break it up, to pack your things and leave the area. It can be used as slang, however, to mean a group "packing up" and leaving.
This is not an idiom. It actually means to stretch your arms and legs. To take a break.
more then you could give or pay then priceless bodily limbs, that are expensive on black market"An arm and a leg" is an idiom that means an exorbitant or very high price paid for something. "Jeeze, did you see that they're charging an arm and a leg for a gallon of gas these days!"
"Break a leg" is said to actors before they go onstage. It means "good luck". Examples: As they were going on stage I told him to break a leg but he slipped and he did, now he won't talk to me any more. "You'll do great, Nick," said Jeff. "Break a leg,"
get a leg up on
I was just pulling your leg when I told you I won the lottery; it was just a joke to see your reaction.
This is not an idiom that I have ever heard. Perhaps you mean an arm AND a leg, which is an exaggerated way of saying something is really expensive.
No, because you have used the term incorrectly. The idiom is YOU'RE pulling my leg, as in YOU ARE doing it."I know you're just pulling my leg when you say you can fly."
No, "daddy long leg" is not an idiom. It refers to a type of arachnid with long, thin legs, also known as a harvestman.
Oh yes, that is an idiom. There are no transactions in which someone literally gives one of his or her arms and legs as payment.
There are many ways to break a leg. You can break a leg by falling down the stairs, or by being in a car accident. If you do break your leg, you will need to go to the hospital and have surgery.
You have to break off your engagement.He had to break off his addiction to cigarettes.
"Under your breath."
It's not an idiom. To break camp means to break it up, to pack your things and leave the area. It can be used as slang, however, to mean a group "packing up" and leaving.
He told me I had won, but I thought he was pulling my leg.