"They will try to make you mad, but keep your shirt on while I make the deal."
"The waitress told the impatient customer to keep his shirt on, and that he would be served when it was his turn."
He tried to keep a straight face although he thought what she had done was very silly and stupid.
This is not an idiom - it means exactly what it says. You should stay fit and healthy.
It is just an idiom and has no history.
That's not an idiom. Keeping a matter secret means not letting anyone know about it.
The expression makes sense in tough economic times and tough neighborhoods where fighting was common but a good shirt on your back wasn't. So you would take it off before fighting. (This also may have originated from prize fighting, where shirts were removed to avoid giving an opponent something to grab.) "Keep your shirt on" advises you to be patient, or calm, until the situation is resolved. It is often used when individuals assertively clamor for attention.
keep your chin up!
The idiom "keep an eye out for" refers to watching for something or someone. An example of a sentence using the idiom would be: Jeff should be arriving soon, so keep an eye out for him.
He tried to keep a straight face although he thought what she had done was very silly and stupid.
German equivalents of the English idiom Keep your shirt on! are:Mach mal die Pferde nicht scheu!Ruhig Blut!Reg dich nicht auf!Blieb locker!
The idiom 'Keep your shirt on is used to tell someone to calm down. The phrase was coined in the 19th century, when men wore shirts that were highly starched and to engage in a fight they had to remove their shirts. Therefore, when you told someone to keep their shirt on, you were in fact saying lets not fight.
Keep watch on.
You have to be agile to keep up with sentence requests on the Internet.
The wind was too strong, so I had to wind up my kite to keep it from blowing away.
a sentence is.... I am just so absentminded, but I don't understand why i keep forgetting my things. thats a sentence using absentminded!
This is not an idiom - it means exactly what it says. You should stay fit and healthy.
You don't. That's not an idiom. You are probably thinking of the phrase bear in mind, which is not an idiom. "Bear" means to hold or carry something, so "bear in mind" just means to keep something in your mind or think about it.Bear in mind, you should always look up the meanings of words in a dictionary.
It is just an idiom and has no history.