It's not an idiom. "Fruits" means the end result of something, so "fruits of labor" would be what you earned from hard work.
Fruits of labor, Well if you are talking about labor as work. This mean, you will be know as how well or how bad you do your job.
Fruits of labor, Well if you are talking about labor as work. This mean, you will be know as how well or how bad you do your job.
Kalair is a tree found in Pakistan which does not have leaves in a provincial language its called " Kalair " but sorry that I don't know its name in any other language. its has reddish flowers and pink fruits fruits are eatable and there is also an idiom on this tree which means "shame on Kalair which have fruits without leaves"
Idiom is correct.
when u get the total result of all ur hard work[i think]
It is more gratifying to enjoy the fruits of your labor.
what is a idiom about a cat
Well all around for cheap farming labor will be. Fruit, and Vegetable farming well what i was saying there. the cheapest labor for farming is and i quote "Fruits and Vegetable farming" I hope you can understand this better now =P
"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.
The idiom for 'larger than life' is "a force of nature."