The literal meaning is to be in water that is deeper than one is tall. The idiomatic meaning is to be too deeply involved with someone or something, beyond what one can deal with.
Your head
Head over heels is an idiom because the meaning does not match what the words are saying.
The phrase emerged in the 14th century as "heels over head", which is more literally accurate, as "head over heels" is the more standard state of being. "Heels over head" evolved into "head over heels" in common use departing its literal meaning, probably for reasons of phrasal elegance.
It means "fall head over heels for someone".
meaning of head waiteress
INRI - meaning this is Jesus King of the Jews
Because they will be love with one another
It refers to people in love, not at work.. thus " Ann is head over heels in love with Peter". Ann is madly in love with Peter.. her head is spinning and she is somersaulting around. "Head over heels" means "not rational." It does not mean "overwhelmed." For that meaning, we might say someone is up to their neck in work, or over their head in it.
The literal meaning is to be in water that is deeper than one is tall. The idiomatic meaning is to be too deeply involved with someone or something, beyond what one can deal with.
This phrase means different things depending on context.If someone said "That went over your head" when telling a joke, they meant that the person did not understand the humor - as if the joke flew over their head and they did not "get" it.If someone said "I am going to go over your head" when dealing with a problem, they meant that they were not satisfied and were going to speak to your supervisor.
It is when someone ggets clobbered over the head. The other person yells sambong!
The one word term is overhead, meaning above, or the noun for a ceiling.