"made of with" .... stolen, thieved
ie - "That naughty man made off with my wallet, I must call the police"
An idiom is something that does not mean what the phrase says literally, so yes. You can't actually laugh your head off.
Ripped off means you had something stolen. You were robbed.
Any phrase that means exactly what it seems to mean is a NON-example. "The table was made of wood" is not an idiom.
you was close to something,you almost got it
get scared or terrified
Any phrase that means exactly what it seems to mean is a NON-example. "The table was made of wood" is not an idiom.
Talking excessively, usually spilling secrets.
It means to fall asleep while sitting (or standing).
Old sailing slang meaning to be no longer in danger.
Nothing. The correct idiom is "get OFF your high horse," meaning stop acting so conceited as if you are above everyone else.
Made a pile means the person has made allot of money (i.e. a pile of money).
You are alot like you mother/father/brother/sister.