It means that one company is secretly dealing with another one. The mental image is of two people having an affair.
It is not an idiom, it means your nose is itching.
idiom means expression like a page in a book
The idiom "to get up on the wrong side of the bed" means that you are upset or feeling sort of cranky. Example- My friend was being mean to me and I told her that she woke up on the wrong side of the bed This idiom means to be grouchy in the morning when you first wake up. The image is that there are two sides of the bed, and you must have gotten out of the wrong side since you feel so bad.
Simply its mean a bully.
I think it means that that person agrees with that others persons idiom and that it fit that question that the teacher or whoever asked that question.
In English, the idiom is "in bed". There's a subtle distinction in that people tend to use "in bed" to mean "lying down, under the covers" (and thus technically "in" the bedding), but will say "on [someone's] bed" when they mean sitting on top of the covers.
death is not a bed of tulips?
It's not really an idiom. It means "what are you thinking about."
RFP is not an idiom. It's an abbreviation.
It is not an idiom, it means your nose is itching.
Yes because you are not literally hitting a sack.
It's not an idiom. It means the tip of your nostril.
idiom means expression like a page in a book
"Sieve" is not an idiom. See the related link.
The idiom "to get up on the wrong side of the bed" means that you are upset or feeling sort of cranky. Example- My friend was being mean to me and I told her that she woke up on the wrong side of the bed This idiom means to be grouchy in the morning when you first wake up. The image is that there are two sides of the bed, and you must have gotten out of the wrong side since you feel so bad.
This is not an idiom. It is a measurement. $100,000 is how you write it in numbers.
Simply its mean a bully.