Turn in "go to bed" is attested from 1695, originally nautical.
time to sleep
in the bed: a lover turns away from her partner, exposing a "cold" shoulder
The phrase "a ticking clock in the puppy's bed" is a modified subject, a sentence fragment. The phrase "Is a ticking clock in the puppy's bed?" would be an interrogative sentence.
It is to over-sex
Get going, get busy, as in Up and at 'em; there's a lot of work to be done . This colloquial idiom, often uttered as a command, uses at 'em (for "at them") in the general sense of tackling a project, and not in reference to specific persons. Sometimes used to order people out of bed in the morning.
It's scare
Turn in "go to bed" is attested from 1695, originally nautical.
in the bed: a lover turns away from her partner, exposing a "cold" shoulder
This is a British slang phrase meaning going to bed or going to sleep. "Wooden hill" refers to stairs, and "Bedfordshire" rhymes with "bed" in a playful way.
Yes turn off is a phrasal verb. Turn off has a literal meaning and an idiomatic meaning. The literal meaning is to stop the flow of something or to extinguish something eg Don't forget to turn off the tape. Turn off the light and put out the cat before you go to bed. The idiomatic meaning is to stop listening eg The boys turn off as soon as I mention homework. Phrasal verbs can have the same forms as other verbs eg turned off -- past turning off -- continuous tenses
The bed, or stratum, of earth which lies immediately beneath the surface soil., To turn up the subsoil of.
It comes from Anglo French 'quilte' about the 12th or 13th Century meaning 'mattress' or 'bed covering' Other than that, origin unknown
The phrase "a ticking clock in the puppy's bed" is a modified subject, a sentence fragment. The phrase "Is a ticking clock in the puppy's bed?" would be an interrogative sentence.
No, "turn" is a verb. A preposition is a word that indicates the relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence. Examples of prepositions include "in," "on," and "at."
"Getting out of bed" is a phrase, including 4 words. Getting is a verb, out is an adverb, of is a preposition, and bed is a noun.
It comes from the word for bed.
The prepositional phrase in the sentence is "under my bed," which functions to show the location of where the favorite blouse was found.
A bed of roses is a pleasant or easy situation, an untroubled existence - a phrase mostly used in the negative.