You go to the market and buy a squash, or it could mean get a sack(balls)
It means your teacher wants you to look up that many idioms, and use each one in a sentence to show that you understand it.Like this:take the MickeyWhy does that bully always take the Mickey out of me when we are at school?
explain
Idioms are hard to understand unless you already know the meaning.
sentence with squash
Squash ( verb ) = Nasukku
Acorn Squash
fertile land
Example sentence - His disrespectful children are going to the dogs.
The meaning of the idiom dead certainty is absolutely or definitely
To include an idiom in an example sentence, simply incorporate the idiom naturally into the sentence to convey a figurative meaning. For example, "She had a chip on her shoulder" is an idiom meaning she was easily offended or held a grudge.
An idiom is a phrase that has a figurative meaning different from its literal meaning, while an idiomatic expression is a specific phrase or sentence structure that is characteristic of a particular language or dialect. Idioms are a type of idiomatic expression, but not all idiomatic expressions are idioms.
There are no idioms in this sentence. If something is "like ___" or "as ___ as ___" then you are looking at a simile. Think "similar" and you can remember simile.