it means don't try to prove yourself Innocent when your not and you are guilty
Worms are slimy and they squirm a lot. If you are "worming out" of something, you are trying to squirm away without getting caught, or trying to get away without having to confess what you did.
If you can offer a solution, you are encouraged to try.
This is the equivalent of our American idiom: If you fail, try try again.
"Get on the ball and finish" is an idiom of "try harder" and "make an effort". Example: Sam really needs to get on the ball and finish his homework!
It's a card idiom. Your "hand" was the set of cards that you were dealt in the game. If you play the hand you were dealt, you don't try to cheat or get out of anything, but work with what you have.
This isn't an idiom. It means just what it seems to mean. Something is enough so that even a saint would lose patience with it.
"Have at it" means "give it a try". Another similar colloquialism or idiom would be, "Go ahead, knock yourself out", or "Go for it".
i dont know try just the mean
If used as an idiom, it usually means that you are confused about something. The image is of you scratching your head to try to think better.
"Would you like to try our tasty worm on a stick at the fair?"
Get ahead of the pack. the Early bird gets the worm.
One such idiom is "Don't look a gift horse in the mouth."
Maybe Probabaly Cause The Maker Of The Worm Is Still Out There If You Get The Worm Try Downanup.org Sorry I Cant Provide A Hyperlink Just Try It!