It's generally expressed as the negative, DOESN'T know her elbow from her ear -- it means she's really dumb or naive. If you can't tell the difference between these two body parts, you really have no sense at all.
Any thing smaller than your elbow needs to be kept out of your ear. That is the old adage and a very smart one. Try telling that to a toddler!
It's the little rough patch of skin on your elbow.
That is not idiomatic. The idiom is "elbow grease" which means "exertion" comparing it to a bottled product."You can get that brass to shine if you use more elbow grease." means "Polish harder and the brass will shine."
It means very happy. Like dad was smiling from ear to earas he held the new baby.
In Mexico, when someone taps their elbow and says "codo"in reference to another, they are saying that that particular person is cheap.In terms of wrestling, it could mean someone is about to elbow you.Hope this helps!
Assuming you can get your elbow to your ear and then inside it, yes, it would be bad for.
Elbow does not belong because it is the only one that is not located on the leg.
Any thing smaller than your elbow needs to be kept out of your ear. That is the old adage and a very smart one. Try telling that to a toddler!
You can have a skull tattoo on your elbow. However, it is important to know what it means. This is constantly translated to mean danger.
Elbow, Ear, Eye...
an ear or a elbow eyes esophagus
· ear · elbow · eyes
ear, eardrum, elbow, epidirmis.
ear (lobe), eye, elbow,
Yes, there is.
how should i know
ear, elbow, eye, eyelash, eyelid, earlobe,