It's not an idiom because you can figure out the meaning by context. If something pleases your eye, it's nice to look at.
It means that something looks good: Flowers please the eye as well as the spirit.
It's just an expression: "As Queer As A One-Dollar Bill...." One dollar bills are especially common--the most common dollar bill at all: Normal.
It means that you have a tattoo of an eye with a teardrop...
A whispering eye is the same thing as a vagina
kiss
It means to pretend you didn't see or know about something.
After fifty years of marriage, she is still the apple of his eye.
I just means can they have your attention. Making eye contact and listening.listen attentively
An excellent expression. To keep an eye, or to keep an eye on things means to maintain a watchful eye. You monitor what is happening with an appropriate zeal to the occasion. Another idiom would be, to keep an eye peeled. It means you are watching and protecting something, or someone.
When at the top of the skyscraper, he had a bird's eye view of the city.
The apple of your eye means a particular preference, or a loved one; the object of somebody's affections. So it means something very dear to you.The idiom "apple of your eye" comes from the Old Testament of the Bible. It is in 4 verses, Deuteronomy 32:10, Psalm 17:8, Proverbs 7:2, and Zechariah 2:8."We all know that she is the apple of your eye."This would mean that the female in this expression is the person you desire. The pupil is also known as the apple of the eye -- it is the source of focus; thus when someone is the apple of the eye, they are the focus, the center.
Ya 3eini (يا عيني) is an idiomatic expression that is an affectionate name that a man would use to address a woman (like sweetie, honey, dearie, etc.). It literally means, "O' my eye", with the idea being that she is the "apple in your eye".
To please the eye is a metaphorical way of saying s/he is attractive, or something is attractive to the eye.
English has many idiomatic expressions, which are phrases that don't mean exactly what they say. Some phrases using fruits include "going bananas" and "the apple of my eye."
Punishment should be similar to the crime committed.
Punishment should be similar to the crime committed.
Punishment should be similar to the crime committed.