The phrase "laid eyes on" is an idiom.
No. It is an idiom.
An idiom is a phrase that makes no sense unless you know the definition. Can a nose actually run somewhere? No, so this is an idiom.
Run rings around, I believe.
One example of an idiom in "The Book Thief" is "run like the wind," which means to run very fast or with great speed. In the book, this idiom is used to describe characters moving quickly or urgently.
"Still waters run deep".
get scared or terrified
An example for the use of the idiom 'it's a piece of cake' is: I can run that 100 yard sprint, it'll be a piece of cake'.
im gay
Well, I hope you got the grade you deserved on this assignment! I have no idea what idiom your teacher wanted you to use, but you'd probably have figured it out more quickly by actually reading the homework instead of trying to cheat. Perhaps they were asking you to decide what "run over" means as an idiom - you can run over by actually placing the work on the floor and running over it with your shoes or with a car ... you can run over by reading over it ... or you can run over by holding the paper and running with it over to someone else.
Nothing. I believe you mean to run out of STEAM, which means that your "engine" doesn't have any "steam" in it - you've run out of energy or drive for something.
The real people who run some enterprise, not the 'figurehead'
It means you did your best and were honorable; you didn't cheat or anything.