Lose your temper.
to be in dept , to owe money or to lose money
A person needs to lose weight.
The idiom, "You lost your marbles," means that you've gone crazy.
No, the idiom is "turned a blind eye" as in "she turned a blind eye to his suffering." You don't change an idiom around or you lose the meaning.
To lose ones temper and react violently.
This isn't an idiom. It means just what it seems to mean. Something is enough so that even a saint would lose patience with it.
It means to feel that there is no way to go on and you just want to give up.
The idiom "to lose one's head" means to panic or become overwhelmed in a situation. There isn't a specific sentence for this idiom as it is used in various contexts. However, an example sentence could be "During the emergency, she lost her head and couldn't think clearly."
Not that I've ever heard. All bets are not winners - most bets lose the money.
If you lose track of something, you cannot find it. To lose track of time means that you got busy and let a deadline slip up on you. To lose track of a person means that you have not been in touch for a long time, and no longer know where they are. To lose track of an item means that you have lost it.
Idiom is correct.
The typical meaning of "pass out" is "to faint or lose consciousness." There are other meanings, depending on the context.