Origin "up a storm"
1. Warming up 2. Dancing 3. Cooling down
A dancing diva is a dancer who does everything perfect in any kind of dance routine or warm-up.
It depends on your age, you must be an adult to do exotic dancing. Other than that, it is up to your moral standards.
Dancing keeps your body toned up. It also keepsyour heart and lung in good shape.
I am pretty sure this is from Fired Up. Its a cheerleading movie so when the cheerleaders are on the bus they sing chants about everything.
It's an alternative way of saying "What's up?"
Each idiom has its own origins - you'll have to look up the etymology of every one separately.
It was a custom to plant daisies over the grave of a loved one.
You see, dead people are really hard to wake up. Because they're dead.
It is a boating term - if you have no paddle, you cannot row very far, can you? So you're stuck.
The origin is disputed, however it appears in print in a Sir Walter Scott novel 'The Antiquary' dated 1816
Origin: In the 1500's, a lot of people owned cows and sheep. These are animals that chew their cuds (food that is spit up from the stomach to the mouth and chewed again). It is a long process.
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It's a very old Scottish/Irish way of saying "I bet you can't back up all that s*** you're talking."
Origin: This American saying dates back to the 1880's and probably originated from an earlier expression, 'to shine up to someone.' That meant to behave nicely so someone will like you. Then they 'take a shine to you' because of your appearance or personality.
This isn't an idiom. It means exactly what it says. If you look up words that you don't understand, you'd see that "storm" means to attack violently. If someone stormed the walls, they attacked the walls. Sometimes people do use this term as a metaphor to mean attack figuratively instead of literally.
Origin: Originated back in the 17th Century - at that time, stakes were driven into the ground as markers to show boundaries of a land area. When you went out and pulled up the stakes, it often meant you were moving.