It means to start a journey or to leave.
Fork in the road means a time when it is necessary to make a decision.
it means go to sleep
This is an idiom meaning to narrow your focus down. It can also mean to narrow your aim and focus on one thing to hit. Picture the zero as a target and you get the idea of the idiom.
vocabulary of the road
Origin: Unless you can fly, something must be in contact with the road when moving on it - the rubber on the tires, the soles of the shoes, the hooves of the horse. So, when you start out on a journey overland, you are hitting the road.
It either means to hit someone on their nose, or if it's an idiom, it means to hit something dead on, or to get something exactly right.
Stuck in a rut is a phrase, but I am not sure if an idiom is the same thing as a phrase. You may be thinking of a cliche and "stuck in a RUT" is a cliche. "Stuck in a road" is neither cliche nor idiom.
Does it make sense if you translate it literally? If it does, it's not an idiom. Have you ever seen anyone actually hit a ceiling? No, so this must be an idiom.
It's not an idiom - the character was holding a bugle (a musical instrument similar to a trumpet) and a bullet hit it.
It means that you threw or shot something and hit a bucket.Do you perhaps mean KICK the bucket? To "kick the bucket" is an idiom that means to die.
To slug means to hit, so it means hitting you until you can't think straight.
"Hit the rocks" is an idiom that means to fail or come to an abrupt and unfortunate end. It can also refer to a relationship or situation that has broken down irreparably.