love is irrational and stupid ;)
No, the phrase "drunk with pleasure" is not considered an idiom. An idiom is a phrase that has a figurative meaning different from its literal meaning. In this case, "drunk with pleasure" is meant to be taken literally, describing a state of intense enjoyment rather than actual intoxication.
Three sheets to the wind means you are drunk.
To 'hit the bottle' means to drink excessively, to get drunk.
To 'hit the bottle' means to drink excessively, to get drunk.
It's not an idiom because you can figure out the meaning by thinking. A PhD is a college degree meaning you have studied a subject intensively and know a lot about it. If you are a doctor of love, you know a lot about love.
very drunk. By the time the party was over, he was cork high and bottle deep.
To say that there is no love lost between two people means that they dislike each other.
"To be" is not an idiom - it's a verb.
This is not an idiom. Idioms are phrases whose meaning you cannot figure out. This is one word, so it's slang. It comes from shopping carts - if you're so drunk you have to be pushed home in a shopping trolley, you're "trollied."
Pest is not an idiom. It's a word.
The idiom "apple shiner" means the teacher's pet.
The meaning of the idiom in the pink of health means being in good health.