It means that you have two things that happen one after another, repetitiously.
that something will come up between you two maybe not today, maybe not tommorrow
It can mean to row a boat (a back and forth motion to move a boat using a special tool) , a row like a row of seats (a continous repetition of something like seats that form a line) , or a fight.
Two dog that are in one row
it means to suck it two times in a row if you know wat i mean
This is the past tense of row which means to paddle a boat.
It is a matrix with 1 row and two columns: something like (x, y).
it mean you row your boat with oars
The same as it means everywhere else. Consecutive means in-a-row. If a rider wins the same race two times in a row, with no one inbetween, then he has two consecutive wins.
these kids were havin row over something stupid
No, in knitting MS does not mean front and wrong side of the row. MS means moss stitch. In this type of stitch, you knit two two rows of the same sequence (purl or knit) and then alternate them.
It's not an idiom because you can figure out what it means. It's a multiplication term meaning something is doubled, or multiplied twice. If you do something "twice over," you do it double, or do it thoroughly.
It is just hunting for food.