"Pestering a person with questions" or "grilling someone with questions" could describe someone who asks a lot of questions to the same person.
"Kick the bucket" is a common idiom that means to die.
Repeating questions can be annoying because they may suggest a lack of attention or understanding from the person asking the question. It can also feel like a waste of time to answer the same question multiple times.
There are multiple definitions for the term "idiom," but generally it refers to a phrase or expression with a meaning that cannot be derived from the individual words in the phrase. It can also refer to a characteristic mode of expression in music, art, or literature.
Yes, you can change an idiom with your own words, but it may lose its original meaning or impact. Idioms are commonly used phrases in a particular language that have a figurative meaning. Modifying them may result in confusion or a loss of the intended message.
An idiom is a phrase that has a figurative meaning different from its literal meaning, while an idiomatic expression is a specific phrase or sentence structure that is characteristic of a particular language or dialect. Idioms are a type of idiomatic expression, but not all idiomatic expressions are idioms.
Actually, it is acceptable for someone to answer the same questions they ask as long as the questions and answers add value to the site and don't violate the rules.
An idiom is a phrase that makes no sense unless you know the definition. Can more than one person actually share a mind? No, so this is an idiom. It means that two people think very much alike on a subject.
It is courtroom jargon rather than an idiom. To cross-examine means for the other side in the case to question the same witness. The "cross" part is added because the goal of the other person questioning the person is opposite that of the first person to do so. If a defense attorney asks a witness what they saw and their description paints the defendant in a positive light, then the prosecutor will want to cross-examine the witness to try to find holes in the story or convince the courtroom that they didn't see what they claimed to have seen.
A political poll is when an organization asks a lot of people the same political questions then reports how much of the group gave each answer.
I did the same riddle today for my homework!!! A HUNDRED WHAT BULB! HAHAHAHA
"Be on the same page" is an idiom that means to agree or have the same understanding or opinion about something.
It is not an idiom, it is fact. A hose can be used for a water level with hundreds of feet between the two points. As long as two bodies of water are connected somehow, they will be at the same level. As an idiom, it would mean a person tends to seek out people they feel are equal or have the same point of view.
you can tell if your ex is still into you if he/she still calls,emails...etc at the same rate as when you were dating and if he/she asks questions about your love life often or shows anussual interest about your dates.if you still have an open and friendly relationship with the person you should ask the person honestly
We don't! They remain in the database so if someone else asks the same question, it will direct them to the answered one.
A political poll is when an organization asks a lot of people the same political questions then reports how much of the group gave each answer.
This is NOT an idiom -- when you hear AS __ AS __ you have A Simile. The correct simile would be "we're all in the same boat," meaning "we have the same circumstances for everyone."
An idiom is the same in any language. It's a phrase that can't be taken literally. If you are asking for the Hebrew word for "idiom" it's neev (× ×™×‘).