It means you are very happy.
When a dog is happy, it wags its tail.
A dog with 2 tails wagging would be very happy.
between two fires idioms
It means he gave his opinion on the subject.
This isn't an idiom because it means exactly what it seems to mean. It's a saying - you can't live tomorrow yet, so today is more valuable.
A drawn match is a tie. "Draw" is just another word for a tied score, so it's not an idiom. You just have to define the two words.
He was behind on what their doing know
The only common idiom is "pleased as punch" (elated, very satisfied).One common idiom "as happy as a dog with two tails" has been transliterated into pleased by some non-English references.
(v)- very excited
This is not an idiom. When you see AS ___ AS ___ you are looking at A Simile. This is comparing two flat things.
A dog has 1 tail unless you are delusional or you have a headache then you may see two
adds up, makes sense
between two fires idioms
It means he gave his opinion on the subject.
When someone puts two and two together, they draw an obvious conclusion from what is known.
tails got two tails cause , he use it to fly , and fight .
Doctors don't cut off Schnauzer's tails , scientists kept mixing breeds till the combined two dogs that gave birth to a dog with no tail , then they named that species of dog a Schnauzer.
Hungarian Vizsla's tails are docked by one or two thirds to match the breed standard. In the UK this operation is illegal unless the dog was bred for working.
It is not an idiom, it is fact. A hose can be used for a water level with hundreds of feet between the two points. As long as two bodies of water are connected somehow, they will be at the same level. As an idiom, it would mean a person tends to seek out people they feel are equal or have the same point of view.