Maybe. It can mean literally putting out the lights or turning them off. If you put someone's lights out, however, it means to knock them unconscious.
No, "put out the lights" is not an idiom. It is a phrase that means to turn off the lights or extinguish a light source.
Yes.
I have not heard this idiom before. Perhaps you heard "Put to death" which means to kill.
You put your shoulder to the wheel.
Put Your Lights On was created in 1999.
"Put your heart into it" means to put as much effort as possible into something.
It means shut up!
idiom
Sorry, there is no such idiom as "at wit's put end to". "at wit's end" means you have tried every possible way to solve a problem but cannot do it and do not know what to do next. "put and end to" means to stop or put a stop to something.
It is an idiom.It is used to tell somebody to be quiet.
it is an idiom
If you put something to rest, you solve the problem and end things.
One idiom for flowers is "pushing up daisies". This means to be dead or buried. This originated when people put daisies on graves in cemeteries.