To slug means to hit, so it means hitting you until you can't think straight.
The idiom "slugging the sense out of" means to aggressively attack or criticize someone until they are confused or disoriented. It implies a forceful and relentless assault on someone's reasoning or understanding.
The idiom "her name rang a bell" means that the name mentioned seems familiar or triggers a memory, but the person may not recall the exact details about who or what it refers to. It suggests a sense of recognition without a clear recollection.
"Bite the bullet" is an idiom, not "bold." "Bite the bullet" means to endure a painful situation bravely.
No, that is not an idiom. The phrase "hit the ceiling" is an expression that means to become very angry or upset.
No, "quietly loud" is not an idiom. As individual words, "quietly" and "loud" have opposite meanings. However, when used together, they may imply a sense of contradiction or irony.
No, the word "feeling" is not an idiom. It is a noun that refers to an emotional state or perception of a situation.
To slug means to hit, so it means hitting you until you can't think straight.
adds up, makes sense
That is not a phrase in English, even in a literal sense.
An idiom is a phrase that appears to make sense, but actually has another meaning. If the sentence makes sense, but seems to mean something besides what it looks like, then it is an idiom. "Frank kicked the bucket" makes perfect sense, and when you realize that it means "Frank died," you have two different meanings.
"To bug" in this sense means "to bother." It means "stop bothering me."
This is not an idiom. Idioms make little or no sense unless you know the definition. This sentence makes perfect sense, so it is not an idiom. The dead fish smelled so bad that even as high as Heaven, you could smell them.
An idiom misuse is to use and idiom in a wrong way that doesn't make sense.
It's not an idiom. Idioms make no sense unless you know the meaning already. "No end" means just what it looks like -- something is endless.
An idiom is a phrase that seems to make no sense unless you know the definition. This makes sense, so it is not an idiom. Something caught the gleam of light from a shiny object.
An idiom usually is a sentence, or part of one. It certainly can be used as part of a sentence. The way to tell if it's an idiom is if it makes sense the way it's literally written.
An idiom is a phrase that doesn't make any sense unless you know the definition. This phrase makes perfect sense, so it is not an idiom. The room became quiet.
It makes perfect sense, so it's not AN idiom.