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It is a red carpet.
A red carpet is placed for important people to walk on when they enter somewhere. Thus rolling out the red carpet is using the form of welcome which you would use for the most important of visitors.
The idiom is incorrect - it should be Roll OUTthe red carpet.The mayor is really going to roll out the red carpet when that rock star arrives in town.
Watch some TV or movies where a king or queen or other dignitary arrives somewhere. It's traditional for them to walk upon a red carpet, signifying their importance. This phrase has come to mean anything that is done to signify someone's importance. It's not a literal red carpet, but a figurative one - they're just making a big to-do about that person's arrival.
it means to give a very special welcome - treat like a VIP
got angry
IT can mean to "roll out the red carpet"
This is not an idiom. When you see AS ___ AS ___, you are looking at A Simile. This one is comparing something to the red color of a turkey's wattle.
Red carpets are typically used for the 'royal treatment'. Whenever someone famous or royal visits a place there will be a long, red carpet rolled out for them to walk on.
This is a term used when someone turns red (blushes) because they are embarrassed.
In debt. Its antithesis, "in the black," refers to having a balanced budget.
A red carpet is red in colour.