About to be sold, or given up.
You are alot like you mother/father/brother/sister.
"Chip off the old block" IS an idiom! It means that the child is just like the parent.
A block is a unit of a town or city, defined as the area between streets. If you're a new kid, you're new there. It's just a way of saying someone's new.
It is not an idiom, it means your nose is itching.
It's not really an idiom. It means "what are you thinking about."
RFP is not an idiom. It's an abbreviation.
"Sieve" is not an idiom. See the related link.
It's not an idiom. It means the tip of your nostril.
idiom means expression like a page in a book
The correct idiom is "a chip off the old block." It typically describes a similarity seen between a family member and an older family member. One resembles the other, just as a chip of wood cut from a certain block of wood resembles the original.
The idiom a slap on the wrist refers to a trivial punishment.
This is not an idiom. It is a measurement. $100,000 is how you write it in numbers.