if you leave to take five, you take a break for a predetermined period of time. So, to get up and finish five would be to return from a break like this.
Example: "When the bell rang, the student got up and finished five and walked back to class."
That's not an idiom, it's just a statement. Someone is saying they got no response to a question or action.
you got it right
Meaning you snapped and got angry.
That when he found out, he got really mad.
She got mad.
That's not an idiom, it's just a statement. Someone is saying they got no response to a question or action.
you got it right
Meaning you snapped and got angry.
That when he found out, he got really mad.
The Idiom actually reads 'Fighting tooth and Nail'. It means to give everything you've got, literally every tooth and nail in your body, to win a struggle.
She got mad.
got angry
idiom 1: out of the blue meaning: happening without warning sentence: After not hearing from him for years, I received a letter out of the blue. idiom 2: hit the roof meaning: got extremely angry sentence: When Dad found out she crashed the car, he hit the roof. idiom 3: heart of gold meaning: someone is a kind, honest, and good sentence: Mr. Peters is a generous person with a heart of gold. idiom 4: in hot water meaning: in trouble sentence: If the assignment isn't completed you'll be in hot water with your teacher. idiom 5: at the top of ones lungs meaning: very loudly sentence: When Jenna finally walked in, we all yelled, "Surprise!" at the top of our lungs.
Think about what it's like to have your hands full of stuff -- you can't carry anything else, and it's hard to hold onto what you've already got. The idiom means that you already have enough to do and cannot take on any new tasks.
"Got nowhere" means accomplished nothing toward a goal.
Not really, because you can pretty easily figure out that it means you've got all your stuff in your backpack and are living on what you've got there. Idioms are phrases that make no sense when you define them literally, so you could argue that "living out of a backpack" was one because you're not literally living inside the backpack, but it's not as confusing as an idiom like "kicked the bucket" meaning someone died or "hit the books" meaning to study.
You've got the idiom incorrect, so it doesn't mean anything. You might say "I've got the picture," which means "I see the situationa and understand it." You might also say "I get the picture," which means the same thing in a less formal way. You don't say "something" in the idiom.