Ace up his sleeve, All Greek to me, Apple of my eye and All bark and no bite are idioms. They begin with the letter A.
I cannot find an idiom that starts off "she cried tears." When you cry, you cry tears, so that would not be a good idiom anyway.
There are no English idioms that start with X
None. "As _____ as a ______" is a metaphor. The proper metaphor would be "as fresh as a daisy."
It's not an idiom, you just have to know the definitions of the words. Fits: bursts of frenzied activity Starts: beginnings It means that whatever it was went along in bursts of energy sometimes and sometimes stopped and started over.
One idiom that starts in such a way would be "a row of fools on a row of stools." This phrase refers to people that spend a lot of time sitting at a bar.
Idiom is correct.
what is a idiom about a cat
"To be" is not an idiom - it's a verb.
An idiom misuse is to use and idiom in a wrong way that doesn't make sense.
The idiom "apple shiner" means the teacher's pet.
"Larger than life" is an idiom, so there isn't an idiom for it.
It is a idiom.