It means a situation is becoming exciting or dangerous. Placing a piece of fat in fire will cause it to cook so quickly parts of it will turn into boiling liquid, melt through the internal structures and explode into the air. This is very hot bits of oil that can burn a person on contact.
Nothing. I believe you mean to run out of STEAM, which means that your "engine" doesn't have any "steam" in it - you've run out of energy or drive for something.
it is not bad to burn calories because if you do it is good but if you don't burn any than the leftover calories will turn into fat
This isn't an idiom. It is a proverb or saying because it means just what it seems to mean. Think about it. How could you use water if it's already gone down the river? If someone is always dwelling on the past, they're getting about as much done as a miller trying to use water that's already flowed past him. In other words, both of them are wasting time and energy on something that's just not going to happen.
The expression is go to great lengths or take great pains or be at pains to accomplish something, meaning to make a special effort, or show something clearly so that everyone will understand. No pain, no gain as Jane Fonda used to say!
No, you can't say something like he talked fat. It is an adjective or a noun But you can say something like he grew fat!
This is not an idiom. An idiom is an expression whose meaning cannot be deduced from its elements. To go through fire and water for someone is easily understood to mean to make a special effort and to undergo difficulties for that person's sake.
This idiom means: you are ready to fight with energy and determination for what you believe in.
Let's go chew the fat. It means to talk, to have a conversation. Usually over some deal or personal business.
Does it make sense? Yes, so it's not an idiom. It's a proverb.
If someone says that something or someone else is "a ball of fire," it means that they are really talented and quickly rising in their field.
The correct word is fuel. It would be considered an idiom because you are not actually adding fuel to a fire. The idiom means that you are making a bad situation worse.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This means to have your plans frustrated. When fat drips into the fire, it flares up.
I believe the idiom you're looking for is "You can't trust a person further than you can throw them". The meaning is meant that you cannot trust someone because you can't throw them very far.
Nothing. The phrase would be "out of the frying pan and into the fire," as in you have jumped out of one bad situation into an even worse one.
With regard to weight loss, "burn fat" is a colloquial way of saying, metabolize fat. No actual fire is involved.
Chew the fat means having a conversation that is not really important. It is "small talk" or "just shooting the breeze". Examples of "chewing the fat" might be talking about the weather or something that's basically inconsequential.
FAT CAT