"In the wind" in that context would mean something that was coming in the future
To hear or learn about something. If your Mom gets wind of this, you will be SO grounded.....
It means to hear about something, often by rumor and often when you are not supposed to know about it, as if you heard it on the wind.
It's not an idiom - ships once had to ride the tide out of harbors because they didn't have motors and had to rely on the tide and the wind to carry them along.
Waves get their energy from the wind. The stronger the wind, the more energy the waves will have. If there is less wind, the waves will have less energy.
yes when the waves roll in the ocean... what do you think makes the waves... wind!
yes when the waves roll in the ocean... what do you think makes the waves... wind!
If you mean water waves, those are usually caused by the wind. For other waves - well, it really depends on the specific situation.
Three sheets to the wind means you are drunk.
I think you must mean "piss into the wind" and it means to do something without thinking ahead to its consequences.
One idiom from "The Wind in the Willows" is "The grass is always greener on the other side," meaning people often desire what others have instead of appreciating what they have.
what of the sun is converted into wind and water waves