yes because your not trying to get literally to the bottom of it.
It is an idiom, because it does not use the term "like" or "as".
"The bottom line" is an idiom that means the final result and comes from the line in a financial statement that shows net income or loss.
It means that the game is over and that you have lost and that you souldnt have tried to do the thing in the first place!
He tried to master his words before the vocabulary test. To "bone up" means to review, to remind yourself of what you already know.
This is an idiom. Getting to the bottom of something means you are going to get the truth about something. It also implies that a certain amount of investigation will need to be done before the truth comes out.
He tried to keep a straight face although he thought what she had done was very silly and stupid.
any one occasion when you tried to pay someone back in his/her own coin
Idiom is correct.
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.
Tom is all thumbs when it comes to cooking. He tried to fix the motor, but he's all thumbs with tools.
what is a idiom about a cat
have u tried the HTM on the bottom of the register page