That means to buy the object for a wonderful price, below the typical charge.
To buy something "for a song" mean to buy something extremely cheaply, as if all you had to do was sing for it.
If you rub something in, you make someone feel even worse when something bad happens by talking about it. For example, if someone doesn't have enough money to buy the latest video game, talking about how fun the game is would be rubbing it in.
There is no idiom in this sentence.Definitions:Your order = what you have ordered or requested to eatAt a restaurant = at a place to buy meals that are already cookedMessed up = done incorrectly
If you "don't buy" something, that means you don't believe it. You're saying you don't believe someone's explanation.
I've never heard this idiom before. The idea of taking someone to the moon, however, is an old one meaning "I'll take you somewhere that few people have ever been," or "I'll do something very special for you." You hear many love songs use the same sort of promises, like "I'll swim the widest river for you," or "I'll buy you whatever your heart desires."
Mad ads are commercials that are designed to get your attention. Often the meaning behind the ad is to get something stuck in the brain of the consumer. A song, or a slogan for example. The belief is, if you are thinking about the ad, you will buy the product.
You got a real bargain.
afford?
Buy Iridium, This is Not a Idiom!
That book is quite long. You can buy a book with the translation.
Price is the cost of something, what amount of money needed to buy it.
It's a little something you buy on a journey, to keep as a memory of the trip.