no it is not one
Actually, it just means that someone laughed VERY hard. Or in other words, laughed ALOT.
The water laughed as it flowed over the rocks.
I'm pretty sure its a metaphor.
You laughed out loud...
Simon Fraser, 11th Lord Lovat (c. 1667 - 9 April 1747) was executed at the Tower Of London for treason. Immediately prior to the axe falling, the scaffolding erected to hold the watching spectators collapsed. Simon thought this so funny he laughed uncontrollably until the executioners axe fell. Hence the expression, laughing your head off
Hyperbole
Actually, it just means that someone laughed VERY hard. Or in other words, laughed ALOT.
Dozing off ; Being distracted ; Not paying attention
The water laughed as it flowed over the rocks.
Metaphor. This phrase is a metaphor that suggests the person is arrogant or conceited, comparing their apparent inflated ego to an actual physical swelling of the head.
I'm pretty sure its a metaphor.
Yes. On twitter she said she was going to get a massage and she was very ticklish and didn't know if she could take it. She later reported she "laughed her head off"
Sailboat is your head Sailboat is your headSailboat is your head
yep
no, but "a cherry is a head" is, but that wouldn't make any sense.
The head cashier laughed at them, convinced it was a practical joke.
No, "a frosty rime was on his head" is not a metaphor in Chapter 1 of "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens. It is a descriptive phrase that indicates cold weather and frost on the character's head. Metaphors involve direct comparisons without using "like" or "as."