It's just a slangy way of saying "let's get started." The image is of a ball game and you're starting the game by rolling out the ball. You can also "keep the ball rolling" by continuing whatever you're doing.
If your team ready, let's get the ball rolling.
If you start the ball rolling, you begin something. It's a sports idiom; the image is of someone starting out a ball game by tossing or rolling the ball onto the field.
It means to keep going with whatever the group is doing.
Balance is not
"Pillow to post" is an idiomatic expression that means from the beginning to the end, or from the start to the finish. It implies covering everything from the initial stage of something to its completion.
Quit horsing around is an idiomatic expression. It begins with the letter Q.
To start being active, get into motion.
It is money that you put into a business to start it up. The image is of planting a seed and watching it (the business) grow.
The expression "hitting on" meaning trying to start a relationship, has a connotation of violence.
"Stop it right now!" When you tell someone, "cut it out!" you're not telling them to get a knife and start dissecting. This is an irritated phrase that you use when someone is doing something annoying, dangerous, or anything in general that they shouldn't do. You are telling them to "cut" that behavior or action out of their act. In other words, you're telling them, "Stop it right now!"
As an idiomatic expression, it may mean : take care of your own business, or, you are starting to bore me .. but it may express a way to start a friendly relationship, depending on the coming replies. Literally it means : Do I know you ?
You need capital and the basic materials of you want to start your own rolling paper company.
· Two wrongs don't make a right
Start the computer. I comes from the expression "to pull one self up by the bootstraps" meaning to get going on your own with out assistance from others.
The expression is: x² + 2
1981