To get a kick means to enjoy - it's an older slang term from the idea of kicking up your heels with joy.
A "kick" is slang for enjoying something, as if you were so happy you kicked up your heels with joy.
To kick something to the curb is an idiom that means you are discarding something. Imagine that you are in a car and you kick something out as you drive by, or that you kick something off the sidewalk to the curb on the street. If you kick reason to the curb, you discard reason or logic. This would mean that you are ignoring reason and logic and making decisions based on emotion instead.
It means that you threw or shot something and hit a bucket.Do you perhaps mean KICK the bucket? To "kick the bucket" is an idiom that means to die.
kicking the guts
"To kick up your heels!" is to celebrate. Get up and do something.
It means just what it says - if someone falls down, don't kick them while they are lying there!You will hear this idiom used when someone has had something bad happen and someone else is trying to make it worse for them.
You can guarantee something.
flatter her to get something
Idiom
It depends on how you use it. If you mean literal colors, then it's not an idiom. If you say something like "It's all there in black and white," then it's an idiom meaning that something is printed.
Yes it is.
to want to do something; a wanting to entertain oneself
Eternal isn't an idiom. It's a word. Idioms are phrases that seem to mean one thing but mean something else.