To hear or learn about something. If your Mom gets wind of this, you will be SO grounded.....
"In the wind" in that context would mean something that was coming in the future
It means to hear about something, often by rumor and often when you are not supposed to know about it, as if you heard it on the wind.
It's not an idiom - ships once had to ride the tide out of harbors because they didn't have motors and had to rely on the tide and the wind to carry them along.
It means she always knows what your doing, where you are, who your with. Or she is annoying. Depends how it is said in a sentence.
My brother can be annoying at times. My brother gets on my nerves sometimes.
"To get wind of" means to hear or discover something that is happening. Examples: "When the cops get wind of our big drug operation, they are going to close us down and send us all to prison." "When your wife gets wind of the affair, she will sue you for divorce."
I think you must mean "piss into the wind" and it means to do something without thinking ahead to its consequences.
Three sheets to the wind means you are drunk.
One idiom from "The Wind in the Willows" is "The grass is always greener on the other side," meaning people often desire what others have instead of appreciating what they have.
It's an idiom-- he who sows the wind shall reap the storms, meaning basically, there are consequences for what you do.
"Gets my goat" means annoys and irritates me.
This idiom means that he doesnt have a particular destination. Also, that he is open to any adventure where ever or when ever.