putting all your cards in the table
No because you can figure out the meaning on your own. If you drag your feet, you're moving slowly.
No because you can figure out the meaning by context. If you drag your feet figuratively, you're moving slowly on something.
This is not an idiom but a metaphor. They are comparing the "craze" to a wave that sweeps you off your feet and carries you along with it. "Craze" is a slang term, however, meaning a popular fad.
They are enamored or in awe of a person. They feel that the ground they have walked on is now special simply by the touch of their feet.
Nothing. You may be thinking of the idiom "plant your feet," which gives you the image of your feet rooted in the ground so you don't move.
Yes, you can change an idiom with your own words, but it may lose its original meaning or impact. Idioms are commonly used phrases in a particular language that have a figurative meaning. Modifying them may result in confusion or a loss of the intended message.
im still on my feet
To drag your feet is to move slowly. "Don't drag your feet" means hurry up.
Someone did something to jeopardize your standing. Other variables-took the ground away beneath your feet, cut you down to size, etc. etc.
Hyperbole
To drag your feet is to move slowly. "Don't drag your feet" means hurry up.
9 feet x 5 feet = 45 sq. feet